Law’s Reasonable Person: A Biographical Introduction 

Please join the Centre for Law and Social Justice to hear and discuss the core argument from Valentin Jeutner's latest book.

About The Event 

Hosted by the Centre for Law and Social Justice (LSJ), Valentin Jeutner will present on the core arguement of his recent book, The Reasonable Person: A Legal Biography. This reflects upon concepts like reasonableness, foreseeability, judgment-making, and gender, disability, and identity under the law. A panel comprised of LSJ members Dr Maria Orchard and Dr Mitchell Travis will then discuss, with Professor Jen Hendry chairing. Lunch will be served. 

Abstract

The 'reasonable person' is a familiar character in many areas of law, from criminal law and tort law, to international law and jurisprudence. In this talk, Valentin Jeutner will argue that the reasonable person is, at heart, an empathetic perspective-taking device, by tracing the standard of the reasonable person across time, legal fields and countries. Beginning with a review of imaginary legal figures in the legal systems of ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome, the book explains why the common law's reasonable person emerged amidst the British industrialisation under the influence of Scottish Enlightenment thinking. Following the figure into colonial courts, onto battlefields and into self-driving cars, the book contends that the reasonable person invites judges, jury-members, and lawyers to take another person's perspective when assessing their own or another person's conduct. The perspective of another is taken by means of empathy, by feeling what others might feel in a particular situation. Thus construed, the figure of the reasonable person can help us make more accurate judgments in a diverse world.

About the Speaker

Valentin Jeutner is an Associate Professor of Law at Lund University and a Retained Lecturer at Pembroke College, Oxford. Holding degrees in both law (Oxford, Georgetown, Cambridge) and theology (Lund, Münster), his research explores foundational questions of (international) law. Before coming to Lund, he was as a PostDoc at Oxford and a policy advisor at the Federal Chancellery in Berlin.

How to Attend

This event will be hybrid. Please RSVP in advance via this form