The H.L.A. Hart Memorial Lecture
The H.L.A. Hart Memorial Lecture is an annual lecture delivered in Oxford by a distinguished speaker. The lecture is named for H.L.A. Hart, who became Professor of Jurisprudence in Oxford in 1952 and was the author of the highly influential book The Concept of Law. The lecture takes place under the auspices of University College, Oxford, where Hart held his chair, and is supported by the Tanner Lectures Trust. Most of the Hart Lectures are published in the Oxford Journal of Legal Studies.
- Social Norms and the Internal Point of View: An Elaboration of Hart’s Genealogy of Law
Philip Pettit, (2019) 39(2): 229-258 - Rights, Constitutions and the Perils of Panglossianism
Frederick Schauer, (2018) 38(4): 635-652 - The Deformation of Contract in the Information Society
Margaret Jane Radin, (2017) 37(3): 505-533 - Responsibility without Consciousness
Nicola Lacey, (2015) 36(2): 219-241 - Kantian Ethics, Animals, and the Law
Christine M. Korsgaard, (2013) 33(4): 629-648 - Hart's Postscript and the Character of Political Philosophy
Ronald Dworkin, (2011) 31(2): 1-37 - Responsibility and the Negligence Standard
Joseph Raz, (2010) 30 (1): 1-18
FREE - Political Safeguards in Democracies at War
Samuel Issacharoff, (2009) 29 (2): 189-214
FREE - Beyond the Separability Thesis: Moral Semantics and the Methodology of Jurisprudence
Jules L Coleman, (2007) 27(4): 581-608
FREE - The War Against Terrorism and the Rule of Law
Owen Fiss, (2006) 26(2): 235-256 - Pepper v Hart; A Re-examination
Johan Steyn, (2001) 21(1): 59-72 - Why is Anglo-American Jurisprudence Unhistorical?
Morton J. Horwitz, (1997) 17(4): 551-586 - Does Moral Subjectivism Rest on a Mistake?
Philippa Foot, (1995) 15(1): 1-14 - The Concept of Law and 'The Concept of Law'
Neil MacCormick, (1994) 14(1): 1-23 - The Dependence of Morality On Law
Tony Honore, (1993) 13(1): 1-17 - Voluntary Acts and Responsible Agents
Bernard Williams, (1990) 10(1): 1-10 - Why have a Bill of Rights?
William J. Brennan Jr, (1989) 9(4): 425-440 - Crime, Punishment and Pale Criminality
Richard Wollheim, (1988) 8(1): 1-16 - The Idea of an Overlapping Consensus
John Rawls, (1987) 7(1): 1-25