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A Companion to Philosophy of Law and Legal Theory, Second edition

Posted By: insetes
A Companion to Philosophy of Law and Legal Theory, Second edition

A Companion to Philosophy of Law and Legal Theory, Second edition By
2010 | 699 Pages | ISBN: 1405170069 | PDF | 6 MB


The articles in this new edition of A Companion to Philosophy of Law and Legal Theory have been updated throughout, and the addition of ten new articles ensures that the volume continues to offer the most up-to-date coverage of  current thinking in legal philosophy. Represents the definitive handbook of philosophy of law and contemporary legal theory, invaluable to anyone with an interest in legal philosophy Now features ten entirely new articles, covering the areas of risk, regulatory theory, methodology, overcriminalization, intention, coercion, unjust enrichment, the rule of law, law and society, and Kantian legal philosophy Essays are written by an international team of leading scholars Content: Chapter 1 Property Law (pages 7–28): Jeremy WaldronChapter 2 Contract (pages 29–63): Peter BensonChapter 3 Tort Law (pages 64–89): Stephen R. PerryChapter 4 Criminal Law (pages 90–102): Leo KatzChapter 5 Public International Law (pages 103–118): Philip BobbittChapter 6 Constitutional Law and Religion (pages 119–131): Perry DaneChapter 7 Constitutional Law and Interpretation (pages 132–144): Philip BobbittChapter 8 Constitutional Law and Privacy (pages 145–159): Anita L. AllenChapter 9 Constitutional Law and Equality (pages 160–176): Maimon SchwarzschildChapter 10 Evidence (pages 177–187): John Jackson and Sean DoranChapter 11 Interpretation of Statutes (pages 188–196): William N. EskridgeChapter 12 Conflict of Laws (pages 197–208): Perry DaneChapter 13 Natural Law Theory (pages 209–227): Brian BixChapter 14 Legal Positivism (pages 228–248): Jules L. Coleman and Brian LeiterChapter 15 American Legal Realism (pages 249–266): Brian LeiterChapter 16 Critical Legal Studies (pages 267–278): Guyora BinderChapter 17 Postrealism and Legal Process (pages 279–289): Neil DuxburyChapter 18 Feminist Jurisprudence (pages 290–298): Patricia SmithChapter 19 Law and Economics (pages 299–326): Jon Hanson, Kathleen Hanson and Melissa HartChapter 20 Legal Formalism (pages 327–338): Ernest J. WeinribChapter 21 German Legal Philosophy and Theory in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (pages 339–349): Alexander SomekChapter 22 Marxist Theory of Law (pages 350–360): Alan HuntChapter 23 Deconstruction (pages 361–367): Jack M. BalkinChapter 24 Law and Society (pages 368–380): Brian Z. TamanahaChapter 25 Postmodernism (pages 381–391): Dennis PattersonChapter 26 Kantian Legal Philosophy (pages 392–405): Arthur RipsteinChapter 27 Legal Pragmatism (pages 406–414): Richard WarnerChapter 28 Law and Its Normativity (pages 415–445): Roger A. ShinerChapter 29 Law and Literature (pages 446–456): Thomas MorawetzChapter 30 The Duty to Obey the Law (pages 457–466): M. B. E. SmithChapter 31 Legal Enforcement of Morality (pages 467–478): Kent GreenawaltChapter 32 Indeterminacy (pages 479–492): Lawrence B. SolumChapter 33 Precedent (pages 493–503): Larry AlexanderChapter 34 Punishment and Responsibility (pages 504–512): George P. FletcherChapter 35 Loyalty (pages 513–520): George P. FletcherChapter 36 Coherence (pages 521–538): Ken KressChapter 37 The Welfare State (pages 539–547): Sanford LevinsonChapter 38 Legal Scholarship (pages 548–558): Edward L. RubinChapter 39 Authority of Law (pages 559–570): Vincent A. WellmanChapter 40 Analogical Reasoning (pages 571–577): Jefferson WhiteChapter 41 Risk (pages 578–589): John OberdiekChapter 42 Regulatory Theory (pages 590–606): Matthew D. AdlerChapter 43 Methodology (pages 607–620): Andrew HalpinChapter 44 Overcriminalization (pages 621–631): Douglas HusakChapter 45 Intention (pages 632–641): Kimberly Kessler FerzanChapter 46 Coercion (pages 642–653): Grant LamondChapter 47 Unjust Enrichment (pages 654–665): Ernest J. WeinribChapter 48 The Ideal of the Rule of Law (pages 666–674): Andrei Marmor