One of the many aspects of the relationship between the sphere of law and the sphere of politics is the fact that the most important decisions on public policies take the form of normative acts enacted through
appropriate legislative procedures. Thus, law-making processes are a strategic element of any system of authority – authority understood positively as concern for the common good. This applies to regulations
created at the international, national and local levels, but also, e.g., to regulations and procedures within organisations (the internal law). Normative acts serve not only to introduce legal instruments
necessary for the implementation of public policies but are indispensable when applying incentives of other kinds, e.g. economic, institutional, educational or cultural. Moreover, even allowing social actors to act freely in a certain area of life (self-regulation) requires appropriate legal regulation.
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