Libertarian theories of law

Libertarianism [edit]

Factions
Minarchism
Anarcho-capitalism
Paleolibertarianism
Geolibertarianism

Influences
Objectivism
Austrian School
Classical liberalism
Individualist anarchism

Practices
Capitalism

Key issues
Economic views
Views of rights
Theories of law
Criticism

Libertarian theories of law build on libertarianism or classical liberalism. The defining characteristic of libertarian legal theory is its insistence that the primary or only legitimate function of law is the preservation of individual liberty. Historically, the Austrian economist Friedrich Hayek is one of the most important libertarian legal theorists. Among contemporary legal theorists, an important and influential libertarian is Randy Barnett, who set out a comprehensive libertarian theory of law in his book The Structure of Liberty. Richard Epstein is also a prominent libertarian legal theorist.

Libertarian legal theory addresses a variety of substantive topics, including the following:

References

Related topics

External links

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See also: Libertarian theories of law, Anarcho-capitalism, Austrian School, Capitalism, Classical liberalism, Criticism of libertarianism, Friedrich Hayek