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      • Common law legal rules are relatively specific legal norms that require actors to act or not act in a specified way, enable or disable specified types of arrangement, or set remedies for specific wrongs. In contrast, legal principles are relatively general legal norms.
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  2. Laws are specific rules and regulations that are enforced by a governing body, such as a government or organization. They are often codified and have consequences for non-compliance. Principles, on the other hand, are fundamental truths or beliefs that guide behavior and decision-making.

  3. The difference between legal principles and legal rules is a logical distinction. Both sets of standards point to particular decisions about legal obligation in particular circumstances, but they differ in the character of the direction they give.

  4. May 27, 2001 · There is an alternative, more natural way to account for the distinction between rules and principles in the law: the relevant difference concerns the level of generality, or vagueness, of the norm-act prescribed by the pertinent legal norm.

    • Andrei Marmor, Alexander Sarch
    • 2001
  5. Sep 6, 2009 · Principles are quite different from both rules and standards--at least on the basis of the definitions that we are using. Both rules and standards provide a framework that is, in theory, sufficient for resolving a particular issue in a legal dispute.

  6. 1. PRINCIPLES AND RULES. most important feature of Dworkin’s article is the distinction he draws between two different types of proposition, both to be found in law. On the one hand are legal rules. These are now, thanks to Hart, better understood than they were.

  7. Laws are rules made by government that forbid certain actions and are enforced by the courts. Laws apply to everyone equally. If you break a law, you may have to pay a fine, pay for the damage you have done, or go to jail.

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