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photo of Timothy Endicott

Timothy Endicott

Dean of the Law Faculty and Professor of Legal Philosophy 

Timothy Endicott has been Dean of the Faculty of Law since October 2007. He is a Fellow in Law at Balliol College, and has been a Professor of Legal Philosophy since 2006. Professor Endicott writes on Jurisprudence and Constitutional and Administrative Law, with special interests in law and language and interpretation.

He is the author of Vagueness in Law (OUP 2000), and Administrative Law (OUP 2009). After studying Classics and Linguistics at Harvard and Oxford, he studied Law at the University of Toronto and practised as a litigation lawyer in Toronto, before pursuing the DPhil in legal philosophy in Oxford.


Subject groups : Constitutional and Administrative Law : Philosophy of Law : Dean's page

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TAO Endicott, Administrative Law (OUP 2009)

TAO Endicott, 'Law and Language' in Jules L.Coleman and Scott Shapiro (eds), Handbook of Jurisprudence and Legal Philosophy (OUP 2002)

TAO Endicott, 'The Reason of the Law' (2003) 48 American Journal of Jurisprudence 83-106

URL: http://www.heinonline.org/HOL/Page?collection=journals&handle=hein.journals/ajj48&id=87

Abstract: A contribution to a symposium on the topic, "Law's Moral Foundations: Has it any?" I argue that it is only possible to identify the content of the ideal of the rule of law by making evaluative judgments as to which aspects of a community's life (and in particular, which aspects of official conduct) ought to be ruled by law. Because all legal systems attain the ideal of the rule of law to some extent, that need for evaluative judgment constitutes a necessary connection between law and morality.


ISBN: 0065-8995

TAO Endicott, 'Adjudication and the Law' (2007) 27 Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 311-326

DOI: 10.1093/ojls/gqm007

ISBN: 1464-3820

TAO Endicott, 'Habeas Corpus and Guantánamo Bay: A View from Abroad' (2007) SSRN - Oxford Legal Studies Research Paper No. 6/2007 (e-pub)


Correspondence address: Balliol College, Oxford OX1 3BJ

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