This book suggests a new direction for the old and lately vigorous
debate about whether there is a moral obligation to obey the law. It
argues that the imposition of unnecessary conditions has misdirected the
search for such an obligation. These conditions matter - they favour
some arguments over others - and they ought not to be accepted without
adequate justification.
The book starts by asking what must be established by any argument for a
moral obligation to obey the law. It asks what follows from a moral
obligation to obey the law being a moral obligation. It then asks what
follows from a moral obligation to obey the law being a species of
political obligation. Finally, it asks what follows from a moral
obligation to obey the law being an obligation to obey.
Having identified the conditions that any argument must satisfy, the
book considers their implications for three well-known arguments - the
argument from consent, the argument from the natural duty of justice,
and the argument from membership. It also identifies the further
conditions that each particular argument must satisfy. In doing so, it
aims to reorient our deliberations on the morality of obeying the law.