Book Details
Orange Code:91201
Paperback:228 pages
Publications:
Categories:
Sections:
1. Pain, Interrogation, and the Body: State Violence and the Law of Torture2. “Too Many Foreigners for My Taste”: Law, Race and Ethnicity in California, 1848-18523. Protection, Harm and Social Evil: The Age of Consent, c. 1885-c. 19404. Sin, Scandal, and Disaster: Politics and Crime in Contemporary Turkey5. Adding Injury To Injury: The Case of Rape and Prostitution in Turkey6. Exception as the Norm and the Fiction of Sovereignty: The Lack of the Right to Health Care in the Occupied Territories7. Mental Health Care During Apartheid in South Africa: An Illustration of How “Science” Can be Abused8. Schistosomiasis and Capital Marxism9. The Inevitable Impunity of Suicide Terrorists10. The Lessons of Nuremberg and the Trial of Saddam Hussein11. Responsibility for Atrocity: Individual Criminal Agency and the International Criminal Court12. Humanity and Inhumanity: State Power and the Force of Law in the Prescription of Juridical Norms13. New Balance, Evil, and the Scales of Justice14. The Execution as Sacrifice15. Legitimacy and Violence: On the Relation between Law and Justice According to Rawls and Derrida
Description:
The topic of "evil" means different things depending upon context. For some, it is an archaic term, while others view it as a central problem of ethics, psychology, or politics. Coupled with state power, the problem of evil takes on a special salience for most observers. When governments do evil -in whatever way we define the term - the scale of harm increases, sometimes exponentially. The evils of state violence, then, demand our attention and concern. Yet the linkage of evil with state power does not resolve the underlying question of how to understand the concepts that we invoke when we use the term. Instead, the question becomes what evil means in the context of and in relation to state power. The fifteen essays in this book bring multiple perspectives to bear on the problems of state-sponsored evil and violence, and on the ways in which law enables or responds to them. The approaches and conclusions articulated by the various contributors sometimes complement and sometimes stand in tension with each other, but as a whole they contribute to our ongoing effort to understand the characteristics and workings of state power, and our need to grapple with the harm it causes.
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