Janet McLean explores how the common law has personified the state
and how those personifications affect and reflect the state's
relationship to bureaucracy, sovereignty and civil society, the
development of public law norms, the expansion and contraction of
the public sphere with nationalization and privatization, state
responsibility and human rights. Treating legal thought as a
variety of political thought, she discusses writers such as Austin,
Maitland, Dicey, Laski, Robson, Hart, Griffith, Mitchell and Hayek
in the context of both legal doctrine and broader intellectual
movements.
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