The Gift of Science

The Gift of Science

Roger Berkowitz

42,89 €
IVA incluido
Disponible
Editorial:
Fordham University Press
Año de edición:
2010
Materia
Teoría general del derecho
ISBN:
9780823231911
42,89 €
IVA incluido
Disponible

Selecciona una librería:

  • Librería Samer Atenea
  • Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
  • Kálamo Books
  • Librería Perelló (Valencia)
  • Librería Elías (Asturias)
  • Donde los libros
  • Librería Kolima (Madrid)
  • Librería Proteo (Málaga)

The front pages of our newspapers and the chatter on the blogs bear witness to the divorce of law from justice. Highly paid lawyers mine the law for loopholes to help Fortune 500 corporations legally evade their taxes and spoil the environment. In a world governed by the rule of law, justice, it seems, is a chimera, an abstraction, and thus a distraction from the real world struggle over political interest. Ought we, then, to abandon talk about abstract ideals of justice in favor of strategic and political arguments? In The Gift of Science, a bold, revisionist account of 300 years of jurisprudence, Roger Berkowitz argues that the idea of justice is endangered and needs to be saved. Moving from the scientific revolution to the rise of law and economics, Berkowitz tells the story of how lawyers invented a science of law to preserve law’s claim to moral authority. The 'gift' of science to law, however, proved bittersweet. Instead of strengthening the bond between law and justice, the subordination of law to science transformed law from an ethical order into a tool for social and economic ends. The Gift of Science is a mesmerizing and original intellectual history of law. As a genealogy of the modern divorce of law from justice, Berkowitz shows that positive law has its formative impulse not in the English works of Thomas Hobbes and John Austin, but in the German tradition of legal science stretching from Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz to Friedrich Carl von Savigny and Rudolf von Jhering. As a contribution to jurisprudence, Berkowitz argues that positive law is best understood as a product of science and not, as usually thought, as the will of a sovereign. As a work of political theory, Berkowitz explores how the subordination of law to social science has hollowed out the ethical center of law as the institutional embodiment of justice. Finally, the book makes manifest the danger that the transformation of law itself into a product of science poses for the possibility of law, justice, and freedom in the modern age.

Artículos relacionados

  • EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
    IT Governance Privacy Team
    An in-depth guide to complying with the EU GDPR.Now in its second edition, EU GDPR – An Implementation and Compliance Guide is a clear and comprehensive guide to this new data protection law, providing a detailed commentary on the Regulation, and setting out the obligations of data  processors and controllers in clear and comprehensible terms.Read this book to learn: How the ...
    Disponible

    30,10 €

  • Banking Laws and Regulations in Nigeria
    Bello Mohammed Magaji
    Banking Law and Regulations in Nigeria: Selected Themes essentially deals with the laid down rules or code of conduct meant to control and set standards for banking business. Indeed, the main aim of the ongoing banking reforms in Nigeria, started in 2004, is to ensure banks’ conformity to the laid down banking rules and regulations. The eleven-chapter book contains vital and ri...
    Disponible

    41,17 €

  • States and the Interpretation of Treaties
    Dimitris Liakopoulos
    States and the Interpretation of Treaties opens with a provocative reconsideration of a debate on the subject of comparative international legal obligations by the United Nations’s International Law Commission. In this book, distinguished Tufts University legal scholar Dimitris Liakopoulos identifies and explores relevant considerations in the work of the Commission and offers ...
  • The role of customs in international treaties
    Dimitris Liakopoulos
    The Role of Customs in International Treaties concentrates on issues of friction between member states of the United Nations. In view of the role played by the United Nations in resolving international disputes, Dimitris Liakopoulos hypothesizes that 'practical guides' based on custom often catalyze the positions taken by states, courts, scholars, and other actors, constituting...
  • Debtor protection in American and European Union bankruptcy law
    Dimitris Liakopoulos
    In Debtor Protection in American and European Union Bankruptcy Law, international law scholar Dimitris Liakopulos raises a delicate issue at the foundations of the modern banking system by analyzing US bankruptcy law with a focus on the concept of automatic stay. His work identifies legal sources and authorities having repercussions in terms of operational protection. It then e...
  • Capital punishment in American courts
    James Biser Whisker / Kevin Spiker
    In the 400 years since the first known execution was carried out for treason in Virginia, American jurisdictions have debated both the appropriateness and methods of capital punishment. Over that time, courts have placed varying restrictions on its application, excluding categories of citizens (for example the insane or the underaged) and evaluating and excluding methods of exe...

Otros libros del autor

  • The Perils of Invention
    Roger Berkowitz
    Hannah Arendt (1906-1975) is the leading thinker of politics and the humanities in the modern era and continues to draw widespread attention. No other scholar so enrages and engages citizens and scholars from all political persuasions, all the while insisting on human dignity, providing a clear voice against totalitarianism, and defending freedom with extraordinary intelligence...