Description |
1 online resource (294 pages) |
Series |
Applied Legal Philosophy |
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Applied legal philosophy.
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Contents |
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Contributors -- Acknowledgements -- Book Preface -- Introduction -- PART I: WHY DELIBERATE -- 1 Is the Ideal of a Deliberative Democracy Coherent? -- 2 The Epistemic Conception of Deliberative Democracy Defended Reasons, Rightness and Equal Political Autonomy -- 3 The Value Added by Theories of Deliberative Democracy Where (Not) to Look -- PART II: HOW TO DELIBERATE -- 4 Democracy and the Real Speech Situation -- 5 Depoliticizing Democracy -- 6 Conflict and Self-Interest in Deliberation -- 7 Framing Public Deliberation and Democratic Legitimacy in the European Union -- PART III: WHERE TO DELIBERATE -- 8 The People in Deliberative Democracy -- 9 Deliberative Demoi-cracy in the European Union Towards the Deterritorialization of Democracy -- 10 Institutional Reform and Democratic Legitimacy Deliberative Democracy and Transnational Constitutionalism -- 11 Should Deliberative Democrats Defend the Judicial Enforcement of Social Rights? -- Index |
Notes |
Print version record |
Form |
Electronic book
|
Author |
Besson, Samantha
|
ISBN |
9781351945462 |
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1351945467 |
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