Matthew Stone asks what unites apparently disparate applications of Levinas' ideas about law and explores the ethical challenge of law's relationship with 'the Other'. Ultimately, he is sceptical that Levinasian ethics can be invested in legal institutions and instead proposes that it should be embodied in the perpetual critique of law.
Matthew Stone asks what unites apparently disparate applications of Levinas' ideas about law and explores the ethical challenge of law's relationship with 'the Other'. Ultimately, he is sceptical that Levinasian ethics can be invested in legal institutions and instead proposes that it should be embodied in the perpetual critique of law.
Matthew Stone is Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Essex. He is co-author of New Critical Legal Thinking: Law and the Political (2012) and is author of numerous journal articles on critical legal theory.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Part I: The Importance of Ethics 1. Introduction: The Law's Other 2. The Ethics of Emmanuel Levinas Part II: Ethics and Law 3. Can Law Be Ethical? 4. Adjudication, Obligation, and Human Rights: Applying Levinas's Ethics Part III: Ethics Against the Law 5. The Law of the Same: Levinas and the Biopolitical Limits of Liberalism 6. Law, Ethics, and Political Subjectivity Bibliography Index.
Acknowledgements Part I: The Importance of Ethics 1. Introduction: The Law's Other 2. The Ethics of Emmanuel Levinas Part II: Ethics and Law 3. Can Law Be Ethical? 4. Adjudication, Obligation, and Human Rights: Applying Levinas's Ethics Part III: Ethics Against the Law 5. The Law of the Same: Levinas and the Biopolitical Limits of Liberalism 6. Law, Ethics, and Political Subjectivity Bibliography Index.
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