Leading Works in Law and Social Justice

Leading Works in Law and Social Justice

Leading Works in Law and Social Justice

Leading Works in Law and Social Justice

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Overview

This book assesses the role of social justice in legal scholarship and its potential future development by focusing upon the ‘leading works’ of the discipline.

The rise of socio-legal studies over recent decades has led to a more interdisciplinary approach to the study of law, which prioritises placing law into its wider social context. Recognising the role that culture, economics and politics play in the development of law is important in order to fully understand the position and impact of law in society. Innovative and written in an engaging way, this collection includes leading and emerging scholars from across the world. Each contributor has been invited to select and analyse a ‘leading work’, a publication which has for them shed light on the way that law and social justice are interlinked and has influenced their own understanding, scholarship, advocacy, and, in some instances, activism. The book also includes a specially written foreword and afterword, which critically reflect upon the contributions of the 'leading works' to consider the role that social justice has played in law and legal education and the likely future path for social justice in legal scholarship.

This book will be an essential resource for all those working in the areas of social justice, socio-legal studies and legal philosophy. It will be of wider interest to the social sciences more generally.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780367253974
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 03/23/2021
Series: Analysing Leading Works in Law
Pages: 282
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Faith Gordon is Senior Lecturer at the ANU College of Law, the Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.

Daniel Newman is Senior Lecturer at Cardiff Law School, Cardiff, Wales.

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

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