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008 160316s2005 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a0754624412
040 _cnls
082 _a340.100000
_bBRO
100 _aBrooks Thom
245 _aRousseau and law
260 _aAldershot
_bAshgate
_c2005
300 _a438p
_cxiii
365 _b Rs. 10,487
505 _aContents: Acknowledgements ix; Series Preface xi; Introduction xiii; Part I: The General Will and Social Contract Theory: 1. What is the general will?, Gopal Sreenivasan (2000); 2. Universal and general wills: Hegel and Rousseau, Arthur Ripstein; 3. Forced to be free, John Hope Mason; Part II: Democratic Rights: 4. Reflections on Rousseau: autonomy and democracy, Joshua Cohen; 5. Rousseau on proportional majority rule, Paul Weirach; 6. Rousseau on agenda-setting and majority rule, Ethan Putterman; 7. 'To persuade without convincing': the language of Rousseau's legislator, Christopher Kelly; 8. Rousseau for (and against) censorship, Christopher Kelly; Part III: Fundamental Law: 9. Rousseau on fundamental law, Melissa Schwartzberg; Part IV: Natural Law and Natural Rights: 10. Rousseau's theory of natural law as conditional, John B. Noone Jr; 11. Rousseau's moral realism: replacing natural law with the general will, Arthur M. Melzer; 12. Rousseau's Pufendorf: natural law and the foundations of commercial society, Robert Wokler; Part V: Rousseau and Dworkin: 13. Rousseau in Dworkin: judicial rulings as expressions of the general will, Richard Nordahl; Part VI: Narratives and the Law: 14. Narratives of hierarchy: Loving v. Virginia and the literary imagination, Martha Nussbaum; Part VII: Bioethics: 15. The reemergence of enlightenment ideas in the 1994 French bioethics debates, Nan T. Ball; Part VIII: Promise Enforcement: 16. Promise enforcement in public housing: lessons from Rousseau and Hundertwasser, Kirsten D.A. Carpenter; Name index.
650 _a1. Law & Philosophy
700 _a
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942 _2ddc
_cBK