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Summary
In the spring of 1778, Jeremy Bentham, along with his younger brother, Samuel, embarked on a campaign to attract the patronage of Catherine of Russia. As part of this effort, the elder Bentham had occasion to compose a lengthy account of his labors during the past three years. A Fragment on Government and the View of the Hard Labour Bill had already been published, and considerable progress had been made on his treatises on offenses and punishments. Bentham mentioned several other projects and singled out for special recommendation his “plan of a Digest”:
I have lying by me in a rough state a Plan for a Digest of the Laws. This concerns the Laws whatever state they may happen to be in for the time being, and is applicable to the Laws of one nation as of another. It is what I have hinted at towards the conclusion of the Fragment. I have had it lying by me these two or three years and am every now and then touching it up and making little additions.
In the letter Bentham was particularly concerned to stress the cosmopolitan potential of his Digest. But his own reference to A Fragment on Government and the dating of the work indicate that he was describing the project which developed out of his critique of common law. Further evidence suggests that he was actively engaged in producing such a Digest during the mid-1770s.
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- The Province of Legislation DeterminedLegal Theory in Eighteenth-Century Britain, pp. 241 - 256Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989