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Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. How Does Law Judge, How Should it be Judged? Part 1: Law's Architectonic 2. Citizenship, Authoritarianism and the Changing Shape of Criminal Law 3. Between Orthodox Subjectivism and Moral Contextualism: Intention and the Law Commission Report 4. The Problem of Mistaken Self-defence: Citizenship, Chiasmus, and Legal Form 5. Legal Form and Moral Judgment: Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide 6. Alan Brudner and the Dialectics of Criminal Law Part 2: Law's Constellation 7. Justice on the Slaughter-bench: The Problem of War Guilt in Arendt and Jaspers 8. Ethics and History: Can Critical Lawyers Talk of Good and Evil? 9. Law, Ethics and Socio-History: The Case of Freedom 10. Responsibility and the Metaphysics of Justice
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Alan Norrie is Professor of Law and former Head of the Law School at Warwick University. He has held chairs at Queen Mary and King’s College, London, and is a Fellow of the British Academy.
Zusammenfassung
Alan Norrie addresses the unresolved split between legal and ethical judgment. This split is seen as a product of the historical shaping of legal judgment, such that its abstraction and formalism both eschew ethical judgment, but also require it.
Zusatztext
'An indispensable starting point for those interested in what a genuinely critical, philosophically-engaged and social-theoretical approach to law looks like. It is the most recent instalment in a far-reaching, illuminating and important project that seeks to chart both law's nature and its place in the ethical landscape.'
Professor William Lucy, Durham University, UK.
‘Alan Norrie is one of the leading voices in the critical analysis of criminal law. In this book he brings together a collection of recent essays and articles that develop two distinctive themes in his work to date. The first is the critique of what he calls law’s ‘architectonic’ - the internal structure of the criminal law and in particular its structural incapacity to do the work of moral judgement without creating constant tension and instability in its legal doctrine. Here the focus is on Norrie’s challenge to liberal legal theory. The second is the exploration of what he calls law’s ‘constellation’, which is to say an ethical critique of legal justice in its wider social, historical setting. Here the focus shifts to Norrie’s challenge to critical theory. Together the two themes constitute a project of ‘Judging law’s judgment’, as the title of his introductory chapter has it.…Justice and the Slaughter Bench offers a fascinating search for a new philosophical ground for criminal justice, one that transcends the limitations of liberalism. With the advanced state of decay of the liberal state now palpable, there are few more urgent tasks for legal theory.’
Peter Ramsay, Modern Law Review