Abstract

Different forms of law are perceived of as possessing differing degrees of legal quality. A quality continuum suggests itself, running from ‘high quality’ national law, through to ‘lesser quality’ European law and to ‘low quality’ international law. This article seeks to explain the perceived differences in the quality of these laws with reference to legal theoretical perceptions of what it is that constitutes the law’s quality. It argues that only a theory of law which identifies the core of the law’s integrity as lying in its ability to act as a fulcrum between spheres of social and public discourse and the exercise of power can fully explain the divergence in legal quality between national, European and international law. With specific regard to the quality of European law, it concludes by arguing that it is weakened by its relative lack of social internalisation—in comparison with a higher degree of legal and political internalisation—within the European public.

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