The Concept of Socialist Law
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Product details:
- Publisher Clarendon Press
- Date of Publication 25 January 1990
- ISBN 9780198252467
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages210 pages
- Size 224x144x19 mm
- Weight 414 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Long description:
This book seeks to remedy the contempt for law prominent in socialist writings. While political thinkers on the left are indisputably concerned with justice, they dismiss those legal institutions which, in liberal capitalist societies, have ensured some minimum measure of justice in citizens' lives. Marxists in particular have tended to reduce law to a capitalist apparatus necessary to mediate conflict between egoistic wills or social classes. The book argues against this doctrine by showing that however ideal a society socialists envisage, legal institutions would be necessary to fairly adjudicate conflict between private and public interests. Each chapter takes up an issue in liberal jurisprudence to see how it would fare in a socialist theory which takes a constructive approach to law. The rule of law, natural and legal rights, obligations, and the sources of law are among the subjects covered. The book concludes that a socialist concept of law would enrich, not only debates about the nature of socialism, but also debates about community and justice which preoccupy `mainstream' political theory and jurisprudence.
'this is a carefully written and cumulatively impressive discussion of law and socialism which goes a long way towards establishing that "socialist legality" is not necessarily a contradiction in terms'
Times Literary Supplement