Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
The disciplines of law and politics include a wide variety of concepts and theories, so there are several ways to analyze the relationships between these fields. Hans Kelsen (1945) defines law as a whole set of norms aimed at regulating relations between citizens themselves and between citizens and the authorities. At its core, law is normative, and its origin is the basic norm of the state. The degree to which the law is autonomous relates to the existence of higher values and the extent to which these values impose limitations on the totality of the law. In a similar vein, politics in its original meaning relates to a whole set of phenomena – both social and political – as they existed in ancient Greece.
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