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Articles 211 - 233 of 233
Full-Text Articles in Law
In Defence Of Exploitation, Justin Schwartz
In Defence Of Exploitation, Justin Schwartz
Justin Schwartz
The concept of exploitation is thought to be central to Marx's Critique of capitalism. John Roemer, an analytical (then-) Marxist economist now at Yale, attacked this idea in a series of papers and books in the 1970s-1990s, arguing that Marxists should be concerned with inequality rather than exploitation -- with distribution rather than production, precisely the opposite of what Marx urged in The Critique of the Gotha Progam.
This paper expounds and criticizes Roemer's objections and his alternative inequality based theory of exploitation, while accepting some of his criticisms. It may be viewed as a companion paper to my What's …
Haymarket: Whose Name The Few Still Say With Tears, A Dramatization In Eleven Scenes, Michael E. Tigar
Haymarket: Whose Name The Few Still Say With Tears, A Dramatization In Eleven Scenes, Michael E. Tigar
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Administering Justice In A Consensus-Based Society, Koichiro Fujikura
Administering Justice In A Consensus-Based Society, Koichiro Fujikura
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox by John O. Haley
State Responses To Task Force Reports On Race And Ethnic Bias In The Courts, Suellyn Scarnecchia
State Responses To Task Force Reports On Race And Ethnic Bias In The Courts, Suellyn Scarnecchia
Articles
While several states have embarked on studies of race and ethnic bias in their courts, Minnesota is only the sixth to publish its report to date. As Minnesota joins the ranks of states with published reports, it is worthwhile to assess the impact of the five earlier published reports from other states. Final reports have been published in Michigan (1989), Washington (1990), New York (1991), Florida (1991) and New Jersey (1992). The published reports make findings and provide several specific recommendations for change. This article will review the published findings and recommendations of the task forces and will discuss the …
Nurturing The Impulse For Justice, Lynne Henderson
Nurturing The Impulse For Justice, Lynne Henderson
Scholarly Works
No abstract provided.
Reactions To Opression: Jurisgenesis In The Jurispathic State, John Valery White
Reactions To Opression: Jurisgenesis In The Jurispathic State, John Valery White
Scholarly Works
This Note offers a model for analyzing the political and legal traditions of oppressed communities and developing a jurisprudence that accurately reflects the communities' views. Under this model, each of these diverse views can be understood from one of four perspectives: parochialism, fatalism, neo-liberalism, and individualism. These four perspectives are defined by an oppressed community's members' aspirations for liberation. Different ideals of justice and liberation underlie each perspective. Though touching on some of the communities' sentiments, the examinations of scholars of color have thus far been largely piecemeal, overemphasizing certain views, unwittingly combining divergent views, or marginalizing and dismissing unpopular …
Rhetoric Of Silence: Some Reflections On Law, Literature, And Social Violence, James A. Epstein
Rhetoric Of Silence: Some Reflections On Law, Literature, And Social Violence, James A. Epstein
Vanderbilt Law Review
Martha Minow suggests the importance of looking outside of court-rooms and the law to find ways of speaking about social and family violence. Her article underscores the difficulties of breaking silence, and yet the power to impose silence is integral to violence itself. We are called upon, however, not only to speak, but to listen. Respectful listening indeed may be a prerequisite to attempting to frame words and actions of intervention and resistance. We are called upon to speak, but we are hard pressed to summon public language that does justice to private pain and anguish.
Robert Cover, in his …
And We Are Not Saved: The Elusive Quest For Racial Justice, Kevin Edward Kennedy
And We Are Not Saved: The Elusive Quest For Racial Justice, Kevin Edward Kennedy
Michigan Law Review
A Review of And We Are Not Saved: The Elusive Quest for Racial Justice by Derrick A. Bell
Dangerous Offenders: The Elusive Target Of Justice, Elizabeth T. Lear
Dangerous Offenders: The Elusive Target Of Justice, Elizabeth T. Lear
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Dangerous Offenders: The Elusive Target of Justice by Mark H. Moore, Susan Estrich, Daniel McGillis, and William Spelman
Turning Away From Law?, David M. Trubek
Turning Away From Law?, David M. Trubek
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Politics of Informal Justice, Volume 1: The American Experience; Volume 2: Comparative Studies by Richard L. Abel and Justice Without Law? by Jerold S. Auerbach
The Economics Of Justice, Michigan Law Review
The Economics Of Justice, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Economics of Justice by Richard A. Posner
A Judge's View On Justice, Bureaucracy, And Legal Method, Harry T. Edwards
A Judge's View On Justice, Bureaucracy, And Legal Method, Harry T. Edwards
Michigan Law Review
At the recent Inaugural Lecture of the University of Windsor's Distinguished Scholars Program on Access to Justice, my former law teaching colleague, Professor Joseph Vining, delivered a speech entitled Justice, Bureaucracy, and Legal Method. Because, in my view, Professor Vining's address raised some disturbing questions, and some seriously misguided suggestions, about the growth of bureaucracy in the courts and the delivery of justice, I believe that a response is appropriate.
Rawls, Justice, And The Income Tax, Charles R.T. O'Kelley
Rawls, Justice, And The Income Tax, Charles R.T. O'Kelley
Scholarly Works
To the extent the primacy of justice is acknowledged in tax policy debate, such acknowledgment is coupled with the assertion that, of course, questions of justice cannot be meaningfully debated. The discussants then attempt to resolve the issue in question by use of ad hoc arguments of fairness and efficiency. The major purpose of this article is to show that not only is justice the primary issue, but that questions of justice can be meaningfully addressed. First, I will examine some of the ad hoc arguments of fairness and efficiency which have been made by proponents of a consumption base …
Justice As Fairness: A Commentary On Rawls's New Theory Of Justice, Gilbert Merritt
Justice As Fairness: A Commentary On Rawls's New Theory Of Justice, Gilbert Merritt
Vanderbilt Law Review
A Theory of Justice,' John Rawls's new book on social and legal philosophy, appears likely to become a monument of systematic thought comparable to Locke's Second Treatise of Government and Mill's Utilitarianism. It provides answers systematically to the most difficult questions of our time and promises to shape the thought and action of men for many years. Daniel Bell, a noted social scientist, has said that in Rawls "we can observe the development of a political philosophy which will go far to shape the last part of the 20th Century, as the doctrines of Locke and Smith molded the 19th."' …
Book Reviews, Francis E. Barkman, Stephen Gorove
Book Reviews, Francis E. Barkman, Stephen Gorove
Vanderbilt Law Review
An Anatomy of Values: Problems of Personal and Social Choice
Charles Reich, of Yale Law School, has given us a vision of a whole new society in The Greening of America. Charles Fried, of Harvard Law School, has more limited objectives in An Anatomy of Values: Problems of Personal and Social Choice. He is content for the moment to examine the nature of a rational end and, in light of this analysis, to discuss limited aspects of traditional ends such as morality and justice.
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The Law Relating to Activities of Man in Space:
This book may be regarded as …
Justice In The 20th Century, Jerome Hall
Justice In The 20th Century, Jerome Hall
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Law And Literature: The Contemporary Image Of The Lawyer, Henry B. Cushing, E. F. Roberts
Law And Literature: The Contemporary Image Of The Lawyer, Henry B. Cushing, E. F. Roberts
Cornell Law Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Justice, Language And Communication, Julius Stone, G. Tarello
Justice, Language And Communication, Julius Stone, G. Tarello
Vanderbilt Law Review
The present paper has been concerned to stress that jurisprudence, insofar as it is not limited to analytical jurisprudence, dare not overlook the distinctive qualities either of common language, or of the special language of lawyers. For what its authors deny above all is the utility of so defining a field--like the justice-field--which is a segment of common language, in terms of a special language or logical structuring similar to those used by lawyers. Nor do we think that the presence of considerations of justice (and therefore of common language statements) in the process of the operation of law, either …
Book Reviews, Paul Carrington, J. Allen Smith, Stanley D. Rose
Book Reviews, Paul Carrington, J. Allen Smith, Stanley D. Rose
Vanderbilt Law Review
Book Reviews --
The John Randolph Tucker Lectures--1953-1956 Lexington, Virginia School of Law, Washington and Lee University, 1957. Pp. 208.
reviewer: Paul Carrington
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Desegregation and the Law By Albert P. Blaustein and Clarence Clyde Ferguson, Jr. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press,1957. Pp. xiv, 332.
reviewer: J. Allen Smith
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The Federal Tort Claims Act By William B. Wright Forward by Emile Z. Berman New York: Central Book Co., 1957. Pp. 248.
reviewer: Stanley D. Rose
Justice Is Not Just A Word, Oscar Hunsicker
Justice Is Not Just A Word, Oscar Hunsicker
Cleveland State Law Review
Every civilized society, from the earliest dawn of history, has had some men set apart from the other members of the clan, tribe, province, state or nation, to decide controversies and issues of fact according to the best wisdom they possessed. They were (and are) the wise men of their time and age. They were and are the law men.
Denning: The Road To Justice, Geoffrey De Deney
Denning: The Road To Justice, Geoffrey De Deney
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Road to Justice. By Sir Alfred Denning.
Book Review. Brown, E. L., Lawyers And The Promotion Of Justice, Jerome Hall
Book Review. Brown, E. L., Lawyers And The Promotion Of Justice, Jerome Hall
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Popular Discontent With Law And Some Proposed Remedies, Henry M. Bates
Popular Discontent With Law And Some Proposed Remedies, Henry M. Bates
Articles
That the practice of law and the administration of justice are under the fire of popular distrust and criticism of extraordinary intensity requires no proof. A fact of which there is evidence in numerous contemporary books, in almost every magazine, in the daily papers, in the remarks, or the questions, or it may be in the sneers of one's friends, requires no further demonstration. The only questions of importance to be answered are to what extent this criticism and this distrust are well founded, what are the remedies for such defects as exist, and what are we lawyers going to …