Mark 
MCBRIDE

 
Associate Professor

Mark holds advanced degrees in Law and in Philosophy. He has published work in the leading journals on diverse topics in legal theory, including legal reasoning and general jurisprudence, but his chief principal research focus is rights theory.

FULL BIOGRAPHY

Contact

(65) 6601-3044
TB-08-01D

Education

DPhil (Philosophy) (University of Oxford); MPhil, MA (Philosophy) (University of London); PhD (University of Cambridge); BCL (University of Oxford); MA (University of Cambridge); Barrister (Lincoln’s Inn)

Current Courses

Criminal Law (B)

Criminal Law (F)

Mark holds advanced degrees in Law and in Philosophy.

He has published work in the leading journals on diverse topics in legal theory, including legal reasoning and general jurisprudence, but his chief principal research focus is rights theory.

For more information on Mark, please visit his personal academic website: https://sites.google.com/view/markmcbride1978/

Edited Books
Mark McBride and Visa AJ Kurki (eds), Without Trimmings: The Legal, Moral, and Political Philosophy of Matthew Kramer (Oxford University Press 2022)

Mark McBride and James E Penner (eds), New Essays on the Nature of Legal Reasoning (Hart Publishing 2022)

Book Chapters
Mark McBride, 'Tracking the Resilience of Hybridity' in Mark McBride and Visa AJ Kurki (eds), Without Trimmings: The Legal, Moral, and Political Philosophy of Matthew Kramer (Oxford University Press 2022)

Mark McBride, 'No Reasons' in Mark McBride and James E Penner (eds), New Essays on the Nature of Legal Reasoning (Hart Publishing 2022)

Journal Articles
Mark McBride, 'Keeping Hohfeld Simple' (2024) 43 Law and Philosophy 451

Mark McBride, 'The Tracking Theory of Claim-Rights' (2023) 64 (3) Analytic Philosophy 256

Mark McBride, 'The Dual Reality of No-Rights' (2021) 66 (1) The American Journal of Jurisprudence 39

Mark McBride, 'Preserving The Interest Theory Of Rights' (2020) 26 (1) Legal Theory 3

Mark McBride, 'The Unavoidability of Evaluation for Interest Theories of Rights' (2020) 33 (2) Canadian Journal of Law & Jurisprudence 293

  • Legal Theory
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