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Author Critical Legal Conference (2010 : Utrecht University)

Title Law's environment : critical legal perspectives / Ubaldus de Vries and Lyana Francot (eds.)
Published Den Haag : Eleven International Publishing ; Portland, Oregon : Sold and distributed in USA and Canada, International Specialized Book Services, [2011], ©2011

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Description 1 online resource (223 pages) : illustrations
Contents Is there any place for legal theory today? : The distinctiveness of law in the age of pluralism / Mariano Croce -- Critical autopoiesis : the environment of the law / Andreas Philippopoulos -- Is law cosmopolitan? / Peter Fitzpatrick -- Great expectations : justice, peace ... or profit? : The universal legal system of Vitoria and Grotius / Can Öztaş -- Reconciling Rwandan reconciliations : international criminal law versus national politics in the mirror of humanity / Eugene McNamee -- Torture and systems theory / Costas Douzinas -- Walter Benjamin's Other law / Marc de Wilde -- Does Carl Schmitt defend a critical legal indeterminacy thesis? / Jeroen Kiewiet -- Four and half centuries of new (new) law and economics : legal pragmatism, discreet joint regulation, and institutional capture at the Commercial Court of Paris / Emmanuel Lazega -- Justice unbound : responsibility in the second modernity / Lyana Francot, Ubaldus de Vries
Summary This book of essays follows from and adds to the presentations, discussions and debates of the Critical Legal Conference 2010, held in Utrecht at the Department of Legal Theory of the Faculty of Law (Utrecht University). The 2010 conference focused, as a main theme, on exposing the normative abuse of law against the background of 'multiple modernities', i.e. the idea that modernity is not a sing¬le encompassing, Western concept but entails different traditions and strands of thought about contemporary society. What ties the essays together is their critique on contem¬porary society or an aspect of society, from a legal-theoretical perspective. Critique implies a method of observation, analysis, interpretation and argumentation, representing a point of view on what is wrong with law in contemporary society. The common denominator is the argument that there is something wrong with law. This is how critical legal theory dis¬tinguishes itself from mainstream legal theory. What is wrong with law is its actual and potential normative abuse. Social developments demand a critical perspective on law and legal scholarship to lay bare this abuse. These developments relate the financial and economic crisis, the continuing 'humanitarian' wars, the rising intolerance to the other and the perceived threat they pose. Hence, human rights are employed by the state to justify torture; the law on patents and intellectual pro¬perty prevent any sense of responsibility for the lack of access to healthcare by the global poor (suffering from aids); trade law exists on the premise of equality of market access, which de facto is a fallacy
Notes "Follows from and adds to the presentations ... of the Critical Legal Conference 2010, held in Utrecht 10-12 September at the Department of Legal Theory of the Faculty of Law (Utrecht University)"--Preface
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Print version record
Subject Critical legal studies -- Congresses
LAW -- Essays.
LAW -- General Practice.
LAW -- Jurisprudence.
LAW -- Paralegals & Paralegalism.
LAW -- Practical Guides.
LAW -- Reference.
Critical legal studies
Droit -- Philosophie -- Congrès.
Critique du droit -- Congrès.
Genre/Form Conference papers and proceedings
Form Electronic book
Author Vries, U. R. M. Th. de, editor
Francot, Lyana, editor
ISBN 9789460944154
9460944159
1283274663
9781283274661