Lloyd's introduction to jurisprudence created by M.D.A. Freeman
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: London Sweet and Maxwell 2001Edition: SeventhDescription: 1526 pagesContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 0421690208
- 042175307
- 9780421690202
- K230
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reserve | Law Library - Reserve | K230 FRE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 72230 | Available | BK2061 | ||
Book | Law Library Open Shelf | K230 FRE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 72231 | Available | BK2064 | ||
Book | Law Library Open Shelf | K230 FRE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 72229 | Available | BK2070 | ||
Book | Law Library Open Shelf | K230 FRE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 72232 | Available | BK2067 |
Includes bibliographical references and index
Chapter 1 The nature of jurisprudence, 2 - Meaning of the law, 3 - Natural law, 4 - Bentham, Austin and classical positivism, 5 - Pure theory of law, 6 - Modern trends in analytical jurisprudence, 7 - Theories of Justice, 8 - Sociological jurisprudence and the sociology of law, 9 - American realism, 10 - The Scandinavian realists, 11 - Historical and anthropological jurisprudence, 12 - Marxist theories of law and state, 13 - Critical legal studies, 14 - Feminist jurisprudence, 15 - Postmodernist jurisprudence, 16 - Critical race theory, 17 - Theories of adjudication.
Lloyd's Introduction to Jurisprudence is the leading textbook on jurisprudence in the English-speaking world. It enables the reader to develop a good understanding of the theories of the different schools of jurisprudence and to appreciate the contributions made to legal theory by leading jurists from the Ancient Greeks to the postmodernists. As ever, it combines text and extracts from authoritative sources. The works of more than a hundred jurists are extracted from Aristotle to the LatCrits. These are supported by detailed and well-documented introductory sections - a textbook in themselves - which give critical insight into the texts. Students and their teachers will profit from having in one book a wide-ranging compendium of legal thought. This new edition contains major new chapters on Theories of Justice and Critical Race Theory. There is substantial new writing in nearly every chapter, with greater emphasis on Hart (particularly the 'Postscript' and the commentary this has provoked), on Raz, Habermas and Unger. Amongst jurists extracted for the first time in this edition are Coleman, Perry, Kramer, Nelken, Iris Marion Young and Tamanaha. There are new sections on the obligation to obey law, the legal enforcement of morality, and precedent. Legal process, legal pluralism, the private-public dualism, and corrective justice are just a few of the subjects now included for the first time. Whatever the syllabus, Lloyd's Introduction to Jurisprudence offers both text and library, enabling students and teachers to find, comprehend and evaluate the core materials, classical and contemporary, in one of the most difficult and rewarding of disciplines.
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