Table of Contents
Foreword
– Baroness Shami Chakrabarti CBE PC
Introduction: Law and Social Justice
– Faith Gordon and Daniel Newman
1. Lifetimes of Commitment to Law and Social Justice
- Jacqueline A. Kinghan
2. Decolonial Violence and the "Native Intellectual"
- Patricia Tuitt
3. A very British domination contract? Charles W. Mills’ theoretical framework and understanding social justice in Britain
- Zara Bain
4. Marx and anti-colonialism
- Thalia Anthony
5. The Law of Peoples
– John Rawls
6. Naming ‘Femicide’
- Ashley Rogers
7. Feminist Legal Engagements towards a Transformative Justice
- Jane Krishnadas
8. Social Justice and the Limits of Regulation: the enduring insights of Marx’s Capital
- Steve Tombs
9. Mariana Valverde: Scale, Jurisdiction and Social Justice
- Jess Mant
10. Policing the Union’s Black: The Racial Politics of Law and Order in Contemporary Britain
- Lambros Fatsis
11. Larissa Behrendt - Achieving Social Justice: Indigenous Rights and Australia's Future
- Robyn Oxley
12. Beyond Criminology: Taking Harm Seriously
- Lynne Copson
13. The Souls of Black Folk, by W.E.B. Du Bois
- Bharat Malkani
14. At war with the court’s ‘sublime complacency’: Bob Woffinden remembered
- Jon Robins
15. The Vulnerable Subject: Anchoring Equality in the Human Condition (Martha Fineman)
- Ellen Gordon-Bouvier
16. Reflections on Law and Social Justice: Robin West, ‘Economic Man and Literary Woman’ Mercer Law Review
- Amir Paz-Fuchs
Afterword: Intersections of Social Justice and Socio-legal Scholarship
- Professor Hilary Sommerlad, Chair in Law and Social Justice, University of Leeds