Caring for Justice
Autor Robin Westen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 feb 1999
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780814793497
ISBN-10: 0814793495
Pagini: 366
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Ediția:Revised
Editura: MI – New York University
ISBN-10: 0814793495
Pagini: 366
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.49 kg
Ediția:Revised
Editura: MI – New York University
Recenzii
"Starkly essentialist reasoning sounds almost quaint by today's standards of gender equality. So it is with some surprise that general readers will encounter an intense and carefully reasoned defense of essentialism from the pen of one of America's best-known feminist legal theorists."
Women's Review of Books "By critiquing traditional ideas about 'justice,' including economic theories about value, this provocative feminist jurisprudential scholar advances what she calls an 'ethic of care' and argues that 'if adjudication is to be just, then the goal of good judging must be both justice and care.'"
Georgia Bar Journal
"Starkly essentialist reasoning sounds almost quaint by today's standards of gender equality. So it is with some surprise that general readers will encounter an intense and carefully reasoned defense of essentialism from the pen of one of America's best-known feminist legal theorists." --Women's Review of Books "By critiquing traditional ideas about 'justice,' including economic theories about value, this provocative feminist jurisprudential scholar advances what she calls an 'ethic of care' and argues that 'if adjudication is to be just, then the goal of good judging must be both justice and care.'" --Georgia Bar Journal
Women's Review of Books "By critiquing traditional ideas about 'justice,' including economic theories about value, this provocative feminist jurisprudential scholar advances what she calls an 'ethic of care' and argues that 'if adjudication is to be just, then the goal of good judging must be both justice and care.'"
Georgia Bar Journal
"Starkly essentialist reasoning sounds almost quaint by today's standards of gender equality. So it is with some surprise that general readers will encounter an intense and carefully reasoned defense of essentialism from the pen of one of America's best-known feminist legal theorists." --Women's Review of Books "By critiquing traditional ideas about 'justice,' including economic theories about value, this provocative feminist jurisprudential scholar advances what she calls an 'ethic of care' and argues that 'if adjudication is to be just, then the goal of good judging must be both justice and care.'" --Georgia Bar Journal