0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R500 - R1,000 (1)
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (1)
  • R2,500 - R5,000 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 3 of 3 matches in All Departments

Law and Society in Transition - Toward Responsive Law (Hardcover): Philippe Nonet, Philip Selznick, Robert A. Kagan Law and Society in Transition - Toward Responsive Law (Hardcover)
Philippe Nonet, Philip Selznick, Robert A. Kagan
R4,405 Discovery Miles 44 050 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Year by year, law seems to penetrate ever larger realms of social, political, and economic life, generating both praise and blame. Nonet and Selznick's Law and Society in Transition explains in accessible language the primary forms of law as a social, political, and normative phenomenon. They illustrate with great clarity the fundamental difference between repressive law, riddled with raw conflict and the accommodation of special interests, and responsive law, the reasoned effort to realize an ideal of polity. To make jurisprudence relevant, legal, political, and social theory must be reintegrated. As a step in this direction, Nonet and Selznick attempt to recast jurisprudential issues in a social science perspective. They construct a valuable framework for analyzing and assessing the worth of alternative modes of legal ordering. The volume's most enduring contribution is the authors' typology-repressive, autonomous, and responsive law. This typology of law is original and especially useful because it incorporates both political and jurisprudential aspects of law and speaks directly to contemporary struggles over the proper place of law in democratic governance. In his new introduction, Robert A. Kagan recasts this classic text for the contemporary world. He sees a world of responsive law in which legal institutions-courts, regulatory agencies, alternative dispute resolution bodies, police departments-are periodically studied and redesigned to improve their ability to fulfill public expectations. Schools, business corporations, and governmental bureaucracies are more fully pervaded by legal values. Law and Society in Transition describes ways in which law changes and develops. It is an inspiring vision of a politically responsive form of governance, of special interest to those in sociology, law, philosophy, and politics.

Law & Society in Transition - Toward Responsive Law (Paperback): Philippe Nonet, Philip Selznick, Robert A. Kagan Law & Society in Transition - Toward Responsive Law (Paperback)
Philippe Nonet, Philip Selznick, Robert A. Kagan
R1,320 Discovery Miles 13 200 Ships in 9 - 15 working days

Year by year, law seems to penetrate ever larger realms of social, political, and economic life, generating both praise and blame. Nonet and Selznick's Law and Society in Transition explains in accessible language the primary forms of law as a social, political, and normative phenomenon. They illustrate with great clarity the fundamental difference between repressive law, riddled with raw conflict and the accommodation of special interests, and responsive law, the reasoned effort to realize an ideal of polity.

To make jurisprudence relevant, legal, political, and social theory must be reintegrated. As a step in this direction, Nonet and Selznick attempt to recast jurisprudential issues in a social science perspective. They construct a valuable framework for analyzing and assessing the worth of alternative modes of legal ordering. The volume's most enduring contribution is the authors' typology-repressive, autonomous, and responsive law. This typology of law is original and especially useful because it incorporates both political and jurisprudential aspects of law and speaks directly to contemporary struggles over the proper place of law in democratic governance.

In his new introduction, Robert A. Kagan recasts this classic text for the contemporary world. He sees a world of responsive law in which legal institutions-courts, regulatory agencies, alternative dispute resolution bodies, police departments-are periodically studied and redesigned to improve their ability to fulfill public expectations. Schools, business corporations, and governmental bureaucracies are more fully pervaded by legal values. Law and Society in Transition describes ways in which law changes and develops. It is an inspiring vision of a politically responsive form of governance, of special interest to those in sociology, law, philosophy, and politics.

Law, Society, and Industrial Justice (Paperback): Philippe Nonet, Howard M. Vollmer Law, Society, and Industrial Justice (Paperback)
Philippe Nonet, Howard M. Vollmer; Foreword by Lauren B Edelman
R815 Discovery Miles 8 150 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
The American Rose Annual; 1916-41
American Rose Society Hardcover R682 Discovery Miles 6 820
History of the United States - from the…
George Bancroft Paperback R629 Discovery Miles 6 290
Mirror of Olden Time Border Life…
Joseph Pritts Paperback R811 Discovery Miles 8 110
History of the United States - from the…
George Bancroft Paperback R629 Discovery Miles 6 290
The Magna Charta Barons and Their…
Charles Henry Browning Hardcover R1,015 Discovery Miles 10 150
Vahram's Chronicle of the Armenian…
Karl Friedrich Neumann, Vahram Vahram Hardcover R776 Discovery Miles 7 760
What Miscegenation is! - and What We Are…
L Seaman Hardcover R678 Discovery Miles 6 780
A History of the Irish Settlers in North…
Thomas D McGee Paperback R394 Discovery Miles 3 940
Life and Times of Joseph Warren
Richard Frothingham Paperback R704 Discovery Miles 7 040
Who Was Who in America - a Companion…
Periodical/Périodique Hardcover R980 Discovery Miles 9 800

 

Partners