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"As claims to human rights today are transformed by legislatures into positive law,we easily forget their moral origins in natural law.C. Fred Alford reminds us of thispedigree employing theappealing teaching virtues of accessible narrative, engaging style and compelling analysis." - Richard Pierre Claude,Senior Research Fellow, Human Rights Center,University of California,Berkeley, and Founding Editor, Human Rights Quarterly
"C. Fred Alford reads a distinctive canon (Aquinas, Locke, Maritain, Arendt, and others) with great sensitivity, enriched by his experience of interviewing ordinary people, teaching, and working in civic organizations. He develops a striking synthesis of narrative ethics and natural law. Alford argues that justice is real but that we know it through stories, not with what is narrowly called "reason." This engaging and accessible book has profound implications for how we should think and act." - Peter Levine, Director of Research, Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service, Tufts University
"Alford transforms the idea of natural law, broadening both its application and appeal for new audiences and for the most pressing issues of our day. A brilliant thesis, it both endorses and challenges the natural law tradition for contemporary scholarship." - Stephen F. Schneck, Department of Politics, The Catholic University of America