Abstract
Contemporary liberal states abound with legal exemptions, most of
which serve to accommodate the interests of cultural minorities
from the indirect effects of general laws. Exemptions, however, are
far from philosophically straightforward. Whatever their legal form
might be, there are a variety of conceptual and normative puzzles.
Indeed, scholarly debates have seemingly reached a genuine
impasse on these problems, including the very coherence of
exemptions and their role in attaining the requirements of justice.
This paper seeks to offer a novel alternative approach based on
considerations of political legitimacy or the normative limits of
state power. Despite the striking implausibility of this insofar as
exemptions seem to necessarily presuppose the legitimacy of the
law, the proposal is defended as possible via a nuanced extension
of liberal legitimacy to the relatively under-theorised domain of
application and enforcement in specific contexts or instances of
individual objection. I sketch this in terms of three Axes of what I
call modal legitimacy – i.e., the manner or mode of the law’s
application and enforcement.