Law: Human rights and civil liberties Books

868 products


  • Church State Corporation Construing Religion in

    The University of Chicago Press Church State Corporation Construing Religion in

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"Sullivan is a distinguished scholar of religious studies and law and religion. Her book, Church State Corporation, turns a humanist’s eye on the evolving law of religious institutions. . . . Sullivan does an excellent job of revealing oddities and inconsistencies in subtle details of the cases on religious institutions, of reading legal sources in creative ways to highlight unspoken assumptions, and of using nonlegal sources to pose questions about the way the law deals with religious institutions. The book is full of learned reflections on church history, religious sociology, and new directions in theology. Scholars of law and religion from any number of disciplinary backgrounds will find the book rich with ideas and provocations." * Marginalia *"[A] careful and nuanced ethnography of the Supreme Court’s political theology." * Constitutional Commentary *"In this polemical yet scholarly tour de force, Sullivan interrogates the U.S. Supreme Court’s rulings in recent major religious freedom cases on theological and legal grounds." * Journal of American History *"Sullivan examines the deeply ambiguous and often unacknowledged ways in which Christian theology remains alive and at work in the US legal imagination. Through readings of the opinions oft he US Supreme Court and other legal texts, Sullivan argues that 'the church' as a religious collective is granted special privilege in US law." * Law & Social Inquiry *"In Church State Corporation, Sullivan approaches political theology through law, and she takes the intermediary association, shapeshifting between church and corporation, as her primary object of study. . . . While US discussions of law and religion have lazily focused on free exercise and disestablishment, unnecessarily centering imagined sovereigns (state, individual), Sullivan’s work and a growing body of religious studies scholarship pushes in fruitful new directions. . . . Church State Corporation helpfully pushes discussions in the field of political theology to take law seriously and models what that would look like. It also provides an entry point for religious studies scholars to join conversations in political theology without holding their noses." -- Vincent Lloyd * Political Theology Network *“Church State Corporation investigates the current state of the particularly American field of ‘disestablished’ religion, sweeps aside shopworn discussions of secularization, and draws deeply on theological traditions to confidently map the intersections of law and religion that support so many features of collective life. The erudition on display in Sullivan’s work is stunning, the argumentation laser-sharp, and the question being pursued is original and important.” -- Mathew Scherer, author of Beyond Church and State: Democracy, Secularism, and Conversion“Church State Corporation will fundamentally refigure conversations about religious establishment in the US. Sullivan’s argument is both admirably urgent and nonpartisan. Anyone concerned with the legal status of religion in both American and international law needs to read this book.” -- Leora Batnitzky, author of How Judaism Became a Religion: An Introduction to Modern Jewish Thought"In trenchant and gripping prose, Sullivan charts how the ambiguous American ideal of ‘religious freedom’ became the jurisprudential ground on which the unholy trinity of contemporary US society—church/state/corporation—was constructed. Each chapter is a revelation, inviting a fundamental rethinking of the fate of religion in the US public sphere. Sullivan’s call for attention to religious practice and imagination beyond the limits of the ‘religion’ that is legally ‘free’ is a powerful challenge to all interested in the intersection of religion and politics." -- Robert Orsi, author of History and PresenceTable of ContentsNote on Capitalization Note to European Readers Introduction. The Definite Article Chapter 1. The Church Makes an Appearance: Hosanna-Tabor v. EEOC Chapter 2. “The Mother of Religion”: The Church Property Cases Chapter 3. Hobby Lobby: The Church, the State, and the Corporation Chapter 4. The Body of Christ in Blackface Conclusion. The Church-in-law Otherwise Acknowledgments Bibliography Index

    15 in stock

    £22.80

  • Liberal Suppression  Section 501c3 and the

    The University of Chicago Press Liberal Suppression Section 501c3 and the

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisA polemic against the provision of the US tax code that prohibits political speech on the part of nonprofitsand, specifically, in this case, churchesarguing that it is an unconstitutional infringement of speech that has been deliberately used to suppress the views and power of religious activists.Trade Review"While there are many books about the role of religion and politics and a large literature on the constitutional implications of tax exemptions and the regulation of nonprofits, none bring these topics together like Hamburger's sophisticated, original, and compelling arguments. Hamburger persuasively argues that this seemingly modest provision in the tax code actually has important implications for constitutional law, religious freedom, and the development of American liberalism."--Ilya Somin, author of The Grasping Hand: "Kelo v. City of New London" and the Limits of Eminent Domain "Liberal Suppression develops and argues vehemently for a point of view underrepresented in recent literature on the tax topics that it addresses. It will enliven and (in a good way) unsettle those debates."--Daniel N. Shaviro, New York University

    15 in stock

    £43.20

  • Confronting Torture  Essays on the Ethics

    The University of Chicago Press Confronting Torture Essays on the Ethics

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisA collection that explores all the current legal, ethical, and cultural thinking about torture and its effects today.

    2 in stock

    £86.45

  • Confronting Torture Essays on the Ethics Legality

    The University of Chicago Press Confronting Torture Essays on the Ethics Legality

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisA collection that explores all the current legal, ethical, and cultural thinking about torture and its effects today.

    15 in stock

    £29.45

  • Ekklesia  Three Inquiries in Church and State

    The University of Chicago Press Ekklesia Three Inquiries in Church and State

    5 in stock

    Book SynopsisA Trios volume that addresses the question of church and state in three different contexts: nineteenth-century Brazil, early Canada, and contemporary American courtrooms.

    5 in stock

    £76.00

  • Ekklesia Three Inquiries in Church and State

    The University of Chicago Press Ekklesia Three Inquiries in Church and State

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisA Trios volume that addresses the question of church and state in three different contexts: nineteenth-century Brazil, early Canada, and contemporary American courtrooms.

    15 in stock

    £22.80

  • The Promises of Liberty

    Columbia University Press The Promises of Liberty

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewAn important addition to the scholarship on an important aspect of America's constitutional heritage... Highly recommended.Choice Choice ...this book is an informative treatment of a depressing subject. -- Helen Knowles H-Law This volume is well edited and the essayists expertly chosen. Alexander Tsesis of Loyola University Chicago School of Law has assembled an unusually compact and cogent collection of the best work on the Thirteenth Amendment. -- Christopher Waldrep Journal of American History A riveting, provocative collection of essays by what can only be described as an all-star team of historians and legal analysts. -- Michael S. Green Journal of the Civil War EraTable of ContentsForeword: The Rocky Road to Freedom-Crucial Barriers to Abolition in the Antebellum Years, by David Brion Davis 1. Introduction: The Thirteenth Amendment's Revolutionary Aims, by Alexander Tsesis Part 1: Historical Settings 2. In Pursuit of Constitutional Abolitionism, by James M. McPherson 3. The Civil War, Emancipation, and the Thirteenth Amendment: Understanding Who Freed the Slaves, by Paul Finkelman 4. Citizenship and the Thirteenth Amendment: Understanding the Deafening Silence, by Michael Vorenberg 5. Emancipation and Civic Status: The American Experience, 1865-1915, by William M. Wiecek 6. Convict Labor in the Post-Civil War South: Involuntary Servitude After the Thirteenth Amendment, by David M. Oshinsky 7. The Thirteenth Amendment and a New Deal for Civil Rights, by Risa L. Goluboff 8. The Workers' Freedom of Association Under the Thirteenth Amendment, by James Gray Pope Part 2: Current Legal Landscapes 9. The Badges and Incidents of Slavery and the Power of Congress to Enforce the Thirteenth Amendment, by George A. Rutherglen 10. The Promise of Congressional Enforcement, by Rebecca E. Zietlow 11. Protecting Full and Equal Rights: The Floor and More, by Aviam Soifer 12. Forced Labor Revisited: The Thirteenth Amendment and Abortion, by Andrew Koppelman 13. The Slave Power Undead: Criminal Justice Successes and Failures of the Thirteenth Amendment, by Andrew E. Taslitz 14. Toward a Thirteenth Amendment Exclusionary Rule as a Remedy for Racial Profiling, by William M. Carter 15. Immigrant Workers and the Thirteenth Amendment, by Maria L. Ontiveros 16. A Thirteenth Amendment Agenda for the Twenty-first Century: Of Promises, Power, and Precaution, by Darrell A. H. Miller 17. Epilogue: The Enduring Legacy of the Thirteenth Amendment, by Robert J. Kaczorowski Acknowledgments List of Contributors Index

    £54.40

  • Screening Torture

    Columbia University Press Screening Torture

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review...adds breath and freshness to the analysis of media representations of state terror and political violence. -- Dr Ruth Kitchen DigitalIcons Thoughtful, insightful, and compelling... Flynn and Salek have gathered together a collection of essays that will have wide appeal to communication scholars, film scholars and graduate students. -- Marita Gronnvoll European Journal of Communication This book is a compelling critique of our dominant political and media discourses. The European LegacyTable of ContentsScreening Torture: An Introduction Part I. Torture and the Implications of Masculinity 1. Countering the Jack Bauer Effect: An Examination of How to Limit the Influence of TV's Most Popular, and Most Brutal, Hero 2. Mel Gibson's Tortured Heroes: From the Symbolic Function of Blood to Spectacles of Pain 3. It's a Perfect World: Torture, Confession, and Sacrifice Part II. Torture and the Sadomasochistic Impulse 4. Lust, Caution: Torture, Sex, and Passion in Chinese Cinema 5. The Art of Photogenic Torture 6. Beyond Susan Sontag: The Seduction of Psychological Torture 7. Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange as Art Against Torture Part III. Confronting the Legacies of Torture and State Terror 8. "Accorded a Place in the Design": Torture in Post-Apartheid Cinema 9. Confessing Without Regret: An Israeli Film Genre Part IV. Torture and the Shortcomings of Film 10. Movies of Modern Torture as Convenient Truths 11. Torture at the Limit of Politics 12. Doing Torture in Film: Confronting Ambiguity and Ambivalence 13. Documenting the Documentaries on Abu Ghraib: Facts Versus Distortion List of Contributors Index

    1 in stock

    £70.40

  • Affirmative Action and the Stalled Quest for

    University of Illinois Press Affirmative Action and the Stalled Quest for

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewWinner of the Outstanding Book Award from the National Conference of Black Political Scientists, 1997 "I strongly recommend this book to sociologists, political scientists, politicians, and business leaders as an analysis of race relations and economic development."--Lewis M. Killian, author of Black and White: Reflections of a White Southern SociologistTable of ContentsIntroduction 1 1 The Affirmative Action Debate 11 2 Black Politics in Richmond, 1945-89 37 3 Set-Aside Politics 70 4 Set-Asides and the Broader Strategy for Black Progress 95 5 White Responses to Affirmative Action 115 6 Richmond v. Croson in the Courts 138 7 Urban Politics after Croson 161 Notes 185 Bibliography 201 Index 209

    £17.09

  • A Principled Stand

    University of Washington Press A Principled Stand

    7 in stock

    Book SynopsisAdds valuable context to the body of work by legal scholars and historians on the seminal Hirabayashi caseTrade Review"Hirbayashi's . . . struggle and case have been analyzed every which way—but one. It has not been, until A Principled Stand, The Story of Hirabayashi v. United States, that readers have had access to Hirabayashi's reflections at the time of his resistance." -- Peter Monaghan * The Chronicle of Higher Education *"A long-awaited and richly satisfying memoir that emerges from a dark place in Northwest history. . . . The book puts you there, as a good novel does." -- Mike Dillon * City Living *"A fascinating look into the inner workings of how one man, with the support of his Christian supporters, took on the U.S. government and ultimately won." -- Martha Nakagawa * Rafu Shimpo *"The book successfully reminds us of the struggles needed to secure our freedoms today." * Publishers Weekly *"A Principled Stand proves that boxes of paper hauled from home to home and stored in closets and garages can eventually become the meat of history. . . . A valuable book, highly recommended." -- Paula Becker * HistoryLink.org *"[T]he authors succeed in one of their main goals: letting people get to know Gordon the person, not merely Gordon the plaintiff in a noted legal case. . . .A Principled Stand should be added to the growing number of quality, firsthand accounts of that era." -- Troy Reeves * Oral History Review *"What a treat it is to spend a few hours with three of the finest minds that have ever addressed Japanese American history....[in this] memoir constructed out of the World War II diaries of Gordon Hirabayashi and other documents." -- Paul Spickard * Oregon Historical Quarterly *"A Principled Stand is more than the story of an important wartime incarceration case; it is also the story of a remarkable person…a must read not only for scholars of Asian American history but also for those interested in the relationship between faith and social justice. The book has lessons for us all." -- Stephanie Bangarth * Pacific Historical Review *Table of ContentsPreface Acknowledgments Acronyms Part I. An Issei-Nisei Family 1. Hotaka to Seattle 2. Growing Up in America 3. "You're Going to College" Part II. Challenges and Incarceration 4. World War II 5. Arraignment Summons 6. King County Jail 7. King County Jail Mates 8. Jail Visitations 9. World War II Interracial Marriage 10. Prison Meditations 1 11. Pretrial 12. Seattle Federal District Court 13. U.S. Supreme Court 14. Out on Bail 15. Thumbing to Jail 16. Catalina Federal Honor Camp 17. Federal Prison Again Part III. The Postwar Years and Vindication 18. Early Postwar Experiences 19. Coram Nobis Appendix 1. Major Publications Appendix 2. Professional Positions, Honors, and Awards Glossary of Names Further Reading About the Coauthors Index

    7 in stock

    £25.19

  • A Principled Stand  The Story of Hirabayashi v.

    University of Washington Press A Principled Stand The Story of Hirabayashi v.

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisTells the story of Hirabayashi v. United States, the Supreme Court case that in 1943 upheld and on appeal in 1987 vacated his conviction. This book combines author's accounts with family photographs and archival documents as it takes readers through the series of imprisonments and court battles he endured.Trade Review"Hirbayashi's . . . struggle and case have been analyzed every which way—but one. It has not been, until A Principled Stand, The Story of Hirabayashi v. United States, that readers have had access to Hirabayashi's reflections at the time of his resistance." -- Peter Monaghan * The Chronicle of Higher Education *"A long-awaited and richly satisfying memoir that emerges from a dark place in Northwest history. . . . The book puts you there, as a good novel does." -- Mike Dillon * City Living *"A fascinating look into the inner workings of how one man, with the support of his Christian supporters, took on the U.S. government and ultimately won." -- Martha Nakagawa * Rafu Shimpo *"The book successfully reminds us of the struggles needed to secure our freedoms today." * Publishers Weekly *"A Principled Stand proves that boxes of paper hauled from home to home and stored in closets and garages can eventually become the meat of history. . . . A valuable book, highly recommended." -- Paula Becker * HistoryLink.org *"[T]he authors succeed in one of their main goals: letting people get to know Gordon the person, not merely Gordon the plaintiff in a noted legal case. . . .A Principled Stand should be added to the growing number of quality, firsthand accounts of that era." -- Troy Reeves * Oral History Review *"What a treat it is to spend a few hours with three of the finest minds that have ever addressed Japanese American history....[in this] memoir constructed out of the World War II diaries of Gordon Hirabayashi and other documents." -- Paul Spickard * Oregon Historical Quarterly *"A Principled Stand is more than the story of an important wartime incarceration case; it is also the story of a remarkable person…a must read not only for scholars of Asian American history but also for those interested in the relationship between faith and social justice. The book has lessons for us all." -- Stephanie Bangarth * Pacific Historical Review *Table of ContentsPreface Acknowledgments Acronyms Part I. An Issei-Nisei Family 1. Hotaka to Seattle 2. Growing Up in America 3. "You're Going to College" Part II. Challenges and Incarceration 4. World War II 5. Arraignment Summons 6. King County Jail 7. King County Jail Mates 8. Jail Visitations 9. World War II Interracial Marriage 10. Prison Meditations 1 11. Pretrial 12. Seattle Federal District Court 13. U.S. Supreme Court 14. Out on Bail 15. Thumbing to Jail 16. Catalina Federal Honor Camp 17. Federal Prison Again Part III. The Postwar Years and Vindication 18. Early Postwar Experiences 19. Coram Nobis Appendix 1. Major Publications Appendix 2. Professional Positions, Honors, and Awards Glossary of Names Further Reading About the Coauthors Index

    15 in stock

    £511.03

  • Correctional

    University of Wisconsin Press Correctional

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisRavi Shankar’s bold and complex self-portrait - and portrait of America - challenges us to rethink our complicity in the criminal justice system and mental health policies that perpetuate inequity and harm. Correctional dives into the inner workings of his mind and heart, framing his unexpected encounters with law and order.

    4 in stock

    £22.80

  • Corporations Are People Too

    Yale University Press Corporations Are People Too

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhy we're better off treating corporations as people under the lawand making them behave like citizens Are corporations people? The U.S. Supreme Court launched a heated debate when it ruled in Citizens United that corporations can claim the same free speech rights as humans. Should they be able to claim rights of free speech, religious conscience, and due process? Kent Greenfield provides an answer: Sometimes. With an analysis sure to challenge the assumptions of both progressives and conservatives, Greenfield explores corporations' claims to constitutional rights and the foundational conflicts about their obligations in society and concludes that a blanket opposition to corporate personhood is misguided, since it is consistent with both the purpose of corporations and the Constitution itself that corporations can claim rights at least some of the time. The problem with Citizens United is not that corporations have a right to speak, but for whom they speak. The solution is not to Trade Review"A subtle, creative and intellectually brave assessment of the nature of corporate personhood and the legal and policy results—constitutional and otherwise-- that follow from that assessment. Greenfield offers thoughtful and often original views on topics ranging from the degree of First Amendment protection that corporations should receive to the nature of corporate behavior that shareholders and the broader public should come to expect."—Floyd Abrams, author of The Soul of the First Amendment “In a lively and very readable book, Greenfield makes the case that corporations must have many, if not all, the constitutional rights that people have.”— Paul Smith, Georgetown University Law Center“Professor Kent Greenfield has written a brilliant book on the role of corporations in American democracy. Greenfield gets us past the discussion of whether corporations should be regarded as persons and focuses on how they should be treated under the law. The book is provocative, original, and engaging and sure to be essential reading in grappling with the role of corporations in our political system.”—Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean and Jesse H. Choper Distinguished Professor of Law, University of California, Berkeley School of Law

    2 in stock

    £22.50

  • Then Comes Marriage

    WW Norton & Co Then Comes Marriage

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisA Los Angeles Times Best Book of 2015 Roberta Kaplan’s gripping story of her defeat of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) before the Supreme Court.Trade Review"United States v. Windsor was a landmark ruling, and the case’s architect, Roberta Kaplan, emerged as a true American hero. Then Comes Marriage is a riveting account of a watershed moment in our history, and the strategy, ingenuity, and humanity that made it happen." -- President Bill Clinton"I thought I knew the Windsor case chapter-and-verse. As if! Then Comes Marriage will forever change the understanding of this landmark case—its genesis, its outside-the-box strategy, and its tactical brilliance. This is the can’t-put-down, emotional, funny, essential explanatory text that makes sense of Windsor, not just as law but as life." -- Rachel Maddow, television host"Roberta Kaplan makes questions of constitutionality and the intricacies of legal strategy read like a John Grisham thriller. Then Comes Marriage explains how we arrived at this surprising moment in history, but it’s also a testament to the persuasive, transformative power of a good story." -- Alison Bechdel, author of Dykes to Watch Out For and Fun Home"A fast-paced, engaging account…. Kaplan breaks down the legal and procedural issues for nonlawyers and preserves suspense even where we know the outcome." -- Jeffrey S. Trachtman - Huffington Post"[A] scintillating read…. [Kaplan and Dickey] weave a fascinating narrative that gives the reader an insight into one of the Supreme Court’s most provocative cases…. This book deserves a place on everyone’s shelf." -- Joan M. Burda - New York Journal of Books"Compelling…. Kaplan deftly uses [Thea Spyer and Edie Windsor’s] story as a lens through which to consider a broader set of inequities, less about marriage than common human decency…. [A] deeply moving book." -- David Ulin - Los Angeles Times"Along with detailing her legal strategy in the lower courts, Kaplan weaves her own coming-out story and her personal relationship into the story of her clients Edie Windsor and Thea Spyer…provid[ing] a revealing juxtaposition of how two very different generations of lesbians wrestled with the social attitudes of their times. It’s a timely, well-told story, brimming with observations about the importance of family…. Kaplan’s rallying cry, ‘It’s all about Edie, stupid,’ keeps the stories of two remarkable women at the center of this historic legal and human drama." -- Publishers Weekly, Starred review"This book tells all. Two great love stories (Robbie and Rachel, Thea and Edie), the trial, and all the internal struggles. It was so interesting and well-written that I could not stop reading it." -- Robin Tyler - The Advocate"[A] page-turning, powerful new book." -- Michelangelo Signorile

    10 in stock

    £20.89

  • American Inheritance

    WW Norton & Co American Inheritance

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisFrom a Pulitzer Prize winner, a powerful history that reveals how the twin strands of liberty and slavery were joined in the nation's foundingTrade Review"Timely and compelling. American Inheritance relates the vital story of liberty and slavery in Revolutionary America with balance and nuance." -- Susan Dunn, author of Jefferson’s Second Revolution"Larson deftly explores the dramatic lives and revealing words of free and enslaved Americans who sought either to preserve or erase the pervasive tension between liberty and bondage in the Revolutionary era." -- Alan Taylor, author of American Republics"Larson has brought a true historian’s sensibility to the fierce new debate over slavery at the founding. American Inheritance unearths a legacy of unexpected ironies, terrible tragedies, and fateful opportunities—a legacy with which Americans still struggle today" -- John Fabian Witt, author of Lincoln’s Code"Larson makes clear how inseparable were the concepts of freedom and bondage in these early years, and thereby makes understandable why the contradictions they created have vexed us so long." -- H. W. Brands, author of Our First Civil War

    15 in stock

    £23.39

  • A Practitioners Guide to the European Convention

    Sweet & Maxwell Ltd A Practitioners Guide to the European Convention

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe foremost guide to this complex area of the law, The Practitioner's Guide to the European Convention on Human Rights provides an exhaustive reference for practitioners and academics. It offers unrivalled depth of analysis into the case law of the European Court of Human Right. Building on the excellence of previous editions, the 7th edition focuses on the considerable body of new case law that has emerged since the previous edition.

    1 in stock

    £223.00

  • The Congressional Black Caucus Minority Voting

    LUP - University of Michigan Press The Congressional Black Caucus Minority Voting

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    15 in stock

    £24.65

  • Caucasians Only

    University of California Press Caucasians Only

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis

    Out of stock

    £35.70

  • Scaling Migrant Worker Rights

    University of California Press Scaling Migrant Worker Rights

    7 in stock

    Book SynopsisA free ebook version of this title is available through Luminos, University of California Press's Open Access publishing program. Visit www.luminosoa.org to learn more. As international migration continues to rise, sending states play an integral part in managing their diasporas, in some cases even stepping in to protect their citizens' labor and human rights in receiving states. At the same time, meso-level institutionsincluding labor unions, worker centers, legal aid groups, and other immigrant advocatesare among the most visible actors holding governments of immigrant destinations accountable at the local level.The potential for a functional immigrant worker rights regime, therefore, advocates to imagine a portable, universal system of justice and human rights, while simultaneously leaning on the bureaucratic minutiae of local enforcement. Taking Mexico and the United States as entry points,Scaling Migrant Worker Rightsanalyzes how an array of organizations put tactical pressure

    7 in stock

    £25.50

  • Muslim Prisoner Litigation

    University of California Press Muslim Prisoner Litigation

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisSince the early 1960s, incarcerated Muslims have used legal action to establish their rights to religious freedom behind bars and improve the conditions of their incarceration. Inspired by Islamic principles of justice and equality, these efforts have played a critical role in safeguarding the civil rights not only of imprisoned Muslims but of all those confined to carceral settings. In this sweeping bookthe first to examine this history in depthSpearIt writes a missing chapter in the history of Islam in America while illuminating new perspectives on the role of religious expression and experience in the courtroom.Table of ContentsContents Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction 1. At the Intersection of Religion and Punishment 2. Islam in American Prisons 3. The Struggle to Be Recognized by Prisons 4. Fighting for Religious Rights 5. Holding Prisons Accountable 6. Muslim Litigiosity 7. Conclusions and Final Thoughts Notes Bibliography Index

    1 in stock

    £64.00

  • Muslim Prisoner Litigation

    University of California Press Muslim Prisoner Litigation

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisSince the early 1960s, incarcerated Muslims have used legal action to establish their rights to religious freedom behind bars and improve the conditions of their incarceration. Inspired by Islamic principles of justice and equality, these efforts have played a critical role in safeguarding the civil rights not only of imprisoned Muslims but of all those confined to carceral settings. In this sweeping bookthe first to examine this history in depthSpearIt writes a missing chapter in the history of Islam in America while illuminating new perspectives on the role of religious expression and experience in the courtroom.Table of ContentsContents Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction 1. At the Intersection of Religion and Punishment 2. Islam in American Prisons 3. The Struggle to Be Recognized by Prisons 4. Fighting for Religious Rights 5. Holding Prisons Accountable 6. Muslim Litigiosity 7. Conclusions and Final Thoughts Notes Bibliography Index

    2 in stock

    £21.25

  • Rebel Speak

    University of California Press Rebel Speak

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisA literarymixtape of transformative dialogues on justice with a cast of visionary rebel activists, organizers,artists, culture workers, thought leaders, and movement builders. Rebel Speaksounds the alarm for a global movement to end systemic injustice led by people doing the day-to-day rebel work in the prison capital of the world. Prison activist, artist, and scholarBryonnRolly Bain brings us transformativeoral history ciphers, rooted in the tradition of call-and-response, to lay bare the struggle and sacrifice on the front lines of the fight to abolish the prison industrial complex. Rebel Speakinvestigates themotives that inspire and sustain movements for visionary change. Sparked by a life-changing interview with working-class heroes Dolores Huerta and Harry Belafonte,Bryonninvites us to join conversationswith change-makers whose diverse critical perspectives and firsthand accounts expose the crisis of prisons and policing in our communities.Through dialogues with activists inclTrade Review"Prison activist Bryonn Bain presents a diverse and eye-opening series of discussions on mass incarceration, racial profiling, and other criminal justice issues. Describing the book as a ‘dialogue-centered mixtape,’ Bain pays homage throughout to the hip-hop culture that inspired and informed his activism. . . . A powerful and intimate look at the fight for a more equitable and compassionate justice system." * Publishers Weekly *“Coming at a time when those who benefit from white supremacy are attacking critical race theory and Black perspectives generally, Rebel Speak is an impassioned addition to conversations about how America was designed to harm Black citizens—and how it continues to do so.” * Foreword Reviews *“Rebel Speak: A Justice Movement Mixtape certainly captures the right vibe, from the cover image of a hand-labeled cassette tape, to the tracklist-style table of contents, to the way the author uses each chapter to pass the mic to people he admires. Rebel Speak features the voices of high-profile artists and activists alongside those of formerly incarcerated men and women to highlight the big issues of justice in society.” * KCET-TV Online *"Throughout his book, Bain uses his and his subjects’ personal perspectives to explore more universal ideas of effective alternatives to mass incarceration." * Pittsburgh Post-Gazette *Table of ContentsForeword by Angela Davis Prologue. Criminal Minded: The Hip Hop Roots of the Critical Race Rebellion Track #1. The Blueprint The Radical Solidarity of Dolores Huerta and Harry Belafonte Track #2. Panther Rising How Albert Woodfox Survived Four Decades in Solitary Track #3. 21st Century Harriet Tubman A Dialogue with Susan Burton Track #4. Critical Justice Mass Incarceration, Mental Health, and Trauma Track #5. Beyond the Bars Jennifer Claypool and Wendy Staggs on Life after Lockdown Track #6. Fear of a Black Movement Public Enemy's Chuck D Fights the Power Thirty Years Strong—A Dialogue with Alicia Virani Track #7. Live from Juvi The Artivism of Maya Jupiter and Aloe Blacc—A Dialogue with Rosa M. Rios Track #8. Trap Classics Who's Capitalizing on Cannabis and Incarceration? Track #9. Sing Sing Blues Reflections of a Street Cop Turned Warden Track #10. Homecoming Returning from Prison in a Pandemic—A Dialogue with Cheyenne Michael Simpson Acknowledgments Index

    15 in stock

    £18.90

  • Human Rights in the Twentieth Century

    Cambridge University Press Human Rights in the Twentieth Century

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisBy focusing on specific instances of assertions or violations of human rights during the past century, this volume analyzes the place of human rights in the various arenas of global politics, providing an alternative framework for understanding the political and legal dilemmas that emerged from these conflicts.Trade Review'Human Rights in the Twentieth Century is a landmark in a field of supreme importance. It is enlightening and therefore disenchanting in the most constructive sense. It brings together a fine group of scholars, mainly historians, to provide historical perspective on a topic that is sorely lacking it and shows the contingency of the deployment of human rights as a political language, the varied roots of that language, and the diversity of objects that it can address.' Donald Bloxham, University of Edinburgh'This is an outstanding collection of essays on various aspects of human rights history in the twentieth century. The essays cover a wide range topically - from the intellectual linealogy of the human rights concept to its relationship to states in specific circumstances - chronologically and geographically and are of uniformly high quality. They make exciting reading and together contribute enormously to helping understand one of the most vital and important - but hitherto insufficiently studied - developments in recent history.' Akira Iriye, Harvard University'This is an impressive collection on a timely and important topic. Its strengths are considerable, including both stimulating synthetic 'think-pieces' on the changing meanings of 'human rights' and archivally based studies of how, and with what results, 'rights-talk' was mobilized by different groups and in different situations.' Susan Pedersen, Columbia University'At long last we have a book that takes a critical approach to the history of human rights. Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann has put together a stellar cast of historians whose topics range widely around the globe. His own introduction raises the scholarship on human rights to a new level. This is the book that scholars and practitioners will need to read and debate.' Eric D. Weitz, University of Minnesota'This volume makes an invaluable contribution to the study of human rights by treating them historically, foregoing familiar triumphalist narratives about steady progress in favour of detailed examinations of the contingent usage of human rights as political language and instrument.' Johannes Paulmann, History Workshop JournalTable of ContentsIntroduction Stefan-Ludwig Hoffmann; Part I. The Emergence of Human Rights Regimes: 1. The end of civilization and the rise of human rights: the mid-20th century disjuncture Mark Mazower; 2. The 'human rights revolution' at work: displaced persons in post-war Europe G. Daniel Cohen; 3. Legal diplomacy: law, politics, and the genesis of postwar European human rights Mikael Rask Madsen; Part II. Postwar Universalism and Legal Theory: 4. Personalism, community, and the origins of human rights Samuel Moyn; 5. René Cassin: les droit de l'homme and the universality of human rights, 1945–66 Glenda Sluga; 6. Rudolf Laun and the human rights of Germans in occupied and early West Germany Lora Wildenthal; Part III. Human Rights, State Socialism, and Dissent: 7. Embracing and contesting: the Soviet Union and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948–58 Jennifer Amos; 8. Soviet rights-talk in the post-Stalin era Benjamin Nathans; 9. Charter 77 and the Roma: human rights and dissent in socialist Czechoslovakia Celia Donert; Part IV. Genocide, Humanitarianism, and the Limits of Law: 10. Toward world law? Human rights and the failure of the legalist paradigm of war Devin O. Pendas; 11. 'Source of embarrassment': human rights, state of emergency, and the wars of decolonization Fabian Klose; 12. The United Nations, humanitarianism and human rights: war crimes/genocide trials for Pakistani soldiers in Bangladesh, 1971–4 A. Dirk Moses; Part V. Human Rights, Sovereignty, and the Global Condition: 13. African nationalists and human rights, 1940s to 1970s Andreas Eckert; 14. The International Labour Organization and the globalization of rights, 1944–70 Daniel Roger Maul; 15. 'Under a magnifying glass': the international human rights campaign against Chile in the 1970s Jan Eckel.

    15 in stock

    £30.99

  • Secret  The Making of Australias Security State

    MP-MEL Melbourne University Secret The Making of Australias Security State

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisAustralia is less secure than it has ever been, and the greatest threat comes from our elected government. Conspiracy? Paranoia? Read Secret: The Making of Australia's Security State and you decide. Fresh archival material and revealing details of conversations between former CIA, US State Department and Australian officials will make you reconsider the world around you.

    15 in stock

    £25.46

  • Rikers

    Random House USA Inc Rikers

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisNEW YORK TIMES EDITORS’ CHOICE • A shocking, groundbreaking oral history of the infamous Rikers jail complex and an unflinching portrait of injustice and resilience told by the people whose lives have been forever altered by it “This mesmerizing and gut-wrenching book shows the brutal realities that tens of thousands of people have been forced to navigate, and survive, in America’s most notorious jail.”—Piper Kerman, New York Times bestselling author of Orange is the New BlackWhat happens when you pack almost a dozen jails, bulging at the seams with society’s cast-offs, onto a spit of landfill purposefully hidden from public view? Prize-winning journalists Graham Rayman and Reuven Blau have spent two years interviewing more than 130 people comprising a broad cross section of lives touched by New York City''s Rikers Island prison complex—from incarcerated people and their relati

    10 in stock

    £21.60

  • An Inconvenient Cop

    Penguin Putnam Inc An Inconvenient Cop

    10 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    10 in stock

    £21.75

  • Sunrise over Ayodhya

    Penguin Random House India Sunrise over Ayodhya

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    15 in stock

    £17.59

  • What Blood Wont Tell

    Harvard University Press What Blood Wont Tell

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisUnearthing the legal history of racial identity, Gross’s book examines the paradoxical and often circular relationship of race and the perceived capacity for citizenship in American society.Trade ReviewWhat Blood Won't Tell brings us at long last a brilliant analysis of the changing meanings of race in American law from the colonial era to the present. It will be indispensable for any informed discussions of a subject that lies at the very core of both American history and identity. -- David Brion Davis * author of Inhuman Bondage: The Rise and Fall of Slavery in the New World *This exquisite inquiry into the complex and shifting ways in which the 'black-white' divide has been marked over the last three centuries excavates the deep roots of racial identification. -- Patricia J. Williams, author of The Alchemy of Race and RightsThrough a close reading of racial identity trials in America, this book offers an eloquent contribution to ongoing debates over affirmative action, identity politics and the construction of a "colorblind" society. Historian Gross argues that racial identity trials--court cases in which outcomes turned on determining a person's "race" and their concomitant rights and privileges--provides an excellent basis for viewing the construction of "whiteness" and assessing the volatile category of race in American society. The author rigorously examines select cases including the outcomes of suits for freedom by onetime slaves like Abby Guy, who in 1857 convinced an all-white male jury that she was white and thus deserving of freedom. Upsetting the familiar notion of the "one-drop rule" in determining racial identity, Gross shows that in such cases the notion of what constituted race was itself as much in play as whether a particular individual could be identified (through some unstable combination of expert and "common sense" opinion) as one race or another. The social "performance" of identity is key, and enduringly so, as Gross periodically underscores by reference to various modern debates and trends. * Publishers Weekly (starred review) *Gross' book, a history of cases in which people have challenged their official racial designation, eloquently demonstrates just how difficult it can be to say what race--mine, yours, anybody's--actually consists of...What Blood Won't Tell is largely a catalog of delusions and the strategies by which Americans tried to prop up those delusions in courts of law...The very fact that some people with African "blood" (not a biologically valid concept, but a common term, then and now) could pass themselves off as white betrayed the reality; blacks, whites and Indians had been marrying, having sex and producing mixed-race children from the very beginning...A book like What Blood Won't Tell--which is, after all, a history, not a prescription--may not offer much that's usable as a guide to the future. But it does provide us with plenty of evidence of how badly we can and have screwed up, and how much imagination and determination it will take to do it better. -- Laura Miller * Salon.com *Argues forcefully that, for all the progress our public life has made toward the formal semblance of racial equality, the history and legal armature of white racism are much more stubborn, institutionalized features of our common life than a single presidential election, no matter how groundbreaking, can wipe away...Gross maps, through countless twists and turns, the extraordinary legal fictions enlisted to keep the formal workings of racial privilege on track. [The book] serves as a bracing reminder that "postracial politics," however captivating it may be as a catchphrase, is very nearly an oxymoron in American life. -- Brian Gilmore * Bookforum *Challenging the presumption of many scholars of the dominance of the "one-drop" rule in conferring black status, Gross argues that despite the rule, in court and by custom, racial boundaries were much more fluid and flexible--yet, primarily in the service of white supremacy...Gross also reflects on how this history of race determination fits into current efforts at a "color-blind" approach that ignores the significance of race in American culture. -- Vernon Ford * Booklist *What Blood Won't Tell chronicles the history of efforts to determine racial identity in the courts. Seldom, if ever, does science enter into the effort; rather, attorneys and others turn their attention to the evidence of skin color, social behavior, cultural customs, and other subjective and changeable evidence. The only thing that remains constant is the underlying assumption that white equals "full social and political citizenship" while anything else is inferior, less-than, and undeserving of Constitutional protection...The overriding opinion was that it's best to be white, but if you can't manage that, just don't be black. This shameful and ignorant American caste system is still as deeply entrenched in the nation's consciousness as ever, it seems...What Blood Won't Tell turns out to be a riveting overview of legal decisions regarding race and freedoms and a dizzying look at the insanity of social hierarchy and its ongoing impact on social development. -- Deborah Adams * Curled Up with a Good Book *Gross [has written] an amazing book that addresses the relationship between race and citizenship in the U.S. Gross's presentation is both detailed and complex. The first half is devoted to establishing the role race and racism have played within the history and law of the U.S., as well as further developing the rich literature within whiteness scholarship. The strength of her argument lies in her ability to inject specific examples, oftentimes cases from the 19th century, into her whiteness discussions. The second half is equally impressive. Here Gross utilizes critical race theory to discuss black Indian identity, race in Hawaii, and other contemporary issues. This book is innovative, accessible, and valuable for undergraduates, graduates, and laypeople interested in a deep conversation on race and history. -- A. R. S. Lorenz * Choice *Table of Contents* A Note on Terminology * Introduction *1. The Common Sense of Race *2. Performing Whiteness *3. Race as Association *4. Citizenship of the "Little Races" *5. Black Indian Identity in the Allotment Era *6. From Nation to Race in Hawai'i *7. Racial Science, Immigration, and the "White Races" *8. Mexican Americans and the "Caucasian Cloak" * Conclusion: The Common Sense of Race Today * Notes * Acknowledgments * Index

    1 in stock

    £24.26

  • Knocking on the Door  The Federal Governments

    Princeton University Press Knocking on the Door The Federal Governments

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisAnalyzing federal involvement in residential segregation, this book examines how the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) attempted to forge elementary changes in segregated residential patterns by opening up the suburbs to groups historically excluded for racial or economic reasons.Trade Review"Why have federal efforts at housing desegregation been less successful than struggles against school and job discrimination? In a thoughtful comparison of the responsible federal agencies, Bonastia contends that the 'institutional home' in which a desegregation task was placed is crucial... [Knocking on the Door] clearly lays out choices and the consequences of desegregation efforts. Highly recommended."--S. D. Borchert, Choice "I found this book to be useful and informative... [It demonstrates] why a results-oriented approach to civil-rights enforcement was not undertaken in housing, as it was, for a time, in education and employment... Bonastia makes a convincing argument that, with a different type of enforcement agency combating housing discrimination, progress could have been greater than it was."--John E. Farley, Contexts "This book provides a fascinating look at the details and nuances of public policy history during the Civil Rights era and deepens our understanding of the consequences of institutional arrangements for the effectiveness of social policy. The book is thus relevant to scholars of social change, institutions, and racial stratification... This work offers valuable insight into the federal role in perpetuating segregation and the institutional forces limiting social change."--Chenoa Flippen, American Journal of SociologyTable of ContentsPreface ix List of Abbreviations for Frequently Cited Government Agencies and Commissions xiii Chapter One: Residential Segregation The Forgotten Civil Rights Issue 1 Chapter Two: The Divergence of Civil Rights Policies in Housing, Education, and Employment 25 Chapter Three: The Federal Government and Residential Segregation, 1866-1968 57 Chapter Four: Conviction and Controversy HUD Formulates Its Fair Housing Policies 9 Chapter Five: Indirect Attack A Housing Freeze Kills Civil Rights Efforts 121 Chapter Six: The Recent Past, Present, and Future of Residential Desegregation 144 List of Abbreviations for Notes 167 Notes 169 Works Cited 207 Index 227

    Out of stock

    £29.75

  • Split Decisions

    Princeton University Press Split Decisions

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisReassesses the place of feminism in the law and politics of sexuality. This book argues that sexuality involves deeply contested and clashing realities and interests, and that feminism helps us understand only some of them.Trade Review"A groundbreaking book examining the contradictions and limitations of feminism in the law... Halley is critical of feminists for relying primarily upon a 'prohibitionist' approach that identifies what's bad in the world and then writes a statute making it unlawful."--Michelle Bates Deakin, Harvard Law Bulletin "Janet Halley's readings of texts are an example of a form of theorizing that can take a break from feminism without dismissing feminist theory from the discussion. As a polemic the book pleads for openness as theorists, an engagement with ideas, events, and politics without knowing in advance our purpose or end point."--Claire Rasmussen, Law and Politics Book Review "[C]ompelling and intellectually stimulating."--Carol Sternhell, Chicago Sun-Times "A provocative and refreshing look at where the pieces have fallen since the feminist sex wars of the 1980s and theoretical developments that have followed in the past two decades. Halley's first person, conversational style ... is bold, witty, candid, incisive and accessible. A potentially polarizing call to take a break from feminism could not be more elegantly presented."--Prabha Kotiswaran, Feminist Legal StudiesTable of ContentsAcknowledgments xi PART ONE: Taking a Break from Feminism The Argument 3 My Complete and Total Lack of Objectivity 11 Taxonomies and Terms 16 m/f, m ??f, and Carrying a Brief for f 17 Governance Feminism 20 Feminism, Sexual and Reproductive 22 A Sex Lexicon 23 Convergentism and Divergentism 25 A Story of Sexual-Subordination Feminism and Its Others 27 Liberation and Responsibility 31 PART TWO: The Political/Theoretical Struggle over Taking a Break Before the Break: Some Feminist Priors 41 Power Feminism 41 Catharine A. MacKinnon, Early and Late 41 Cultural Feminism 58 Robin West, Caring for Justice 60 MACKINNON/WEST 76 Liberal Feminism 79 Convergentist and Divergentist Hybrid Feminism The Combahee River Collective Statement 82 THE COMBAHEE RIVER COLLECTIVE STATEMENT/ THE COMBAHEE RIVER COLLECTIVE STATEMENT 89 Gayatri Spivak, "Can the Subaltern Speak?" 91 MACKINNON/WEST/COMBAHEE RIVER COLLECTIVE/SPIVAK 102 The Break 106 Gay Identity/Feminism/Queer Theory 107 Gayle Rubin, "Thinking Sex" 114 Receiving French Social Theory 119 Michel Foucault, Volume One 119 FOUCAULT/MACKINNON/WEST/GAY IDENTITY POLITICS 124 The Split, from Feminism and within It 132 Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Epistemology of the Closet 133 Judith Butler, Gender Trouble 136 BUTLER/MACKINNON 139 Butler, "Imitation" 140 Rubin, "Interview" 146 Feminism from Its Outside: Queer Theory by Men 150 Leo Bersani, "Is the Rectum a Grave?" 151 BERSANI/TAKING A BREAK 165 Duncan Kennedy, "Sexy Dressing" 167 KENNEDY/TAKING A BREAK 181 Feminism and Its Others 187 Feminist "Paralysis" 187 Paranoid Structuralism and the Moralized Mandate to Converge 188 An Experiment in Political Stylistics (do try this at home) 192 1990-2000: From Political to Ethical Feminism 207 Marianne Hirsch and Evelyn Fox Keller, Conflicts in Feminism, and Elisabeth Bronfen and Misha Kavka, Feminist Consequences 208 1990-95: Getting to Deadlock 221 Judith Butler and Joan W. Scott, Feminists Theorize the Political, and Seyla Benhabib et al., Feminist Contentions 221 Around 1993: Mapping Feminism and Queer Theory 227 Henry Abelove, Miche'le Aina Barale, and David M. Halperin, The Lesbian and Gay Studies Reader 228 Sedgwick, Tendencies, and Michael Warner, Fear of a Queer Planet 230 MACKINNON/SPIVAK/WARNER/SEDGWICK 237 Elizabeth Weed and Naomi Schor, feminism meets queer theory 244 1998: Trans Theory Splits While Staying in Place 260 Jay Prosser, Second Skins 261 PROSSER/BUTLER/RUBIN PART THREE: How and Why to Take a Break from Feminism Taking a Break to Decide (I) 283 The Costs of "Making Difference Costless" 285 Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Services 290 The Costs and Benefits of Taking a Break from Feminism 304 The Costs 304 Getting Rid of Feminism 304 Silencing Women 306 Flight from Feminism, Imagined as Limits, to the "Queer Utopia," Imagined as Libertine, Unbounded or Libertarian 308 Definitional Violence; the Foreclosure of Critique; and the Reinscription of Heterosexism in Queer Theory 309 Reifying Mere Terminology 312 Matricide, Misogyny, and Male Identification 312 Weakening Feminism and So Harming Real Women 316 The Benefits 319 Breaking with the Politics of Injury/Seeing around Corners of Our Own Construction 319 Seeing the Brain Drain as a Good Thing 340 Resisting Bad Faith 341 Minimizing Moral Perfectionism and Magic Realism 344 Deconstituting Women's Suffering 345 Taking a Break to Decide (II) 348 Twyman v. Twyman 348 Notes 365 Index 391

    Out of stock

    £27.20

  • After Civil Rights

    Princeton University Press After Civil Rights

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisRace is now relevant not only in negative cases of discrimination, but in more positive ways as well. This book examines this emerging strategy in a range of employment situations, including the low-skilled sector, professional and white-collar jobs, and entertainment and media.Trade ReviewWinner of the 2014 Richard A. Lester Award for the Outstanding Book in Industrial Relations and Labor Economics, Industrial Relations Section of Princeton University Finalist for the 2014 Benjamin L. Hooks Institute for Social Change National Book Award, The University of Memphis Honorable Mention for the 2015 Oliver Cromwell Cox Book Award, Racial and Ethnic Minorities Section of the American Sociological Association "After Civil Rights makes a compelling case for the pervasiveness of race-conscious employment practices."--Glenn Altschuler, Florida Courier "John Skrentny, Professor of Sociology and Co-Director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC-San Diego, gives readers a well-researched, thoroughly documented and provocative work, presenting his theory for how employers view race in the workplace in the USA... Skrentny's chapter on racial realism, and its corollary, immigrant realism, in the low-wage workplace, is one I wish I had written... His account of how the law works in practice and on the ground is a great read for those interested in legal studies, history, political science, sociology or civil rights."--Leticia Saucedo, LSE Review of Books "If you want to explore deeper social policy, it is worth a read."--Barry H. Dyller, Trial "With the book's over 1,300 notes, scores of case law findings, and dozens of studies on race and labor market outcomes, it is impossible not to be impressed by Skrentny's erudition, research prowess, and deft ability to link multiple academic disciplines under one driving question... If you are a race, labor, immigration, or legal scholar you should absolutely read this book. You will never think about Title VII or the intersection of race and employment decisions in the same way again."--Charles A. Gallagher, American Journal of Sociology "Skrentny shows that in many sectors of the labor market, race is used in ways that were unanticipated when the 1964 Civil Rights Act was enacted... [His] account of racial realism in the low-skilled sector is chilling."--Kevin Lang, Journal of Economic Literature "This book skillfully presents comprehensive empirical research and is written in a conversational style accessible to a wide audience."--Nigel Carter, Transfer "[An] important and thought-provoking book."--Anthony S. Chen, Social Service Review "Skrentny has authored a fascinating book that is filled with law, information about how employers operate notwithstanding the law, and empirical evidence that supports and, at times, contradicts some employers' beliefs about the usefulness of employing race as a qualifier for jobs. This empirical research should be useful to lawyers who litigate these cases using Title VII. And Skrentny comes up with a cross-disciplinary approach to solving problems. Not all of his solutions are politically or constitutionally possible, but the legislative solutions he suggests are interesting and innovative, and, perhaps in the future, may be effective."--Ann C. McGinley, Tulsa Law Review "After Civil Rights not only contributes valuably to our understanding of how race figures into employment practices at the contemporary American workplace, it also succeeds in making the case for renewing the debate about where law and public policy should go from here."--Anthony S. Chen, Social Service Review "Sociologist John D. Skrentny has written an important and original book examining the fundamental role played by race in hiring and other personnel decisions in the modern American workplace. The originality of his premise calls attention to a phenomenon that everyone knows about but rarely discusses as he investigates the ways in which racial considerations are taken into account by employers for a wide range of reasons, even though in principle this practice was prohibited by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and justly celebrated as a landmark statute of historic importance. Skrentny obtains remarkable mileage by exploring this simple yet apparently paradoxical state of affairs in depth and by avoiding judgmental impulses that frequently arise."--Gavin Wright, Journal of American StudiesTable of ContentsList of Figures and Tables ix Preface xi Chapter 1 Managing Race in the American Workplace 1 Chapter 2 Leverage Racial Realism in the Professions and Business 38 Chapter 3 We the People Racial Realism in Politics and Government 89 Chapter 4 Displaying Race for Dollars Racial Realism in Media and Entertainment 153 Chapter 5 The Jungle Revisited? Racial Realism in the Low-Skilled Sector 216 Chapter 6 Bringing Practice, Law, and Values Together 265 Notes 291 Index 383

    1 in stock

    £31.50

  • After Civil Rights  Racial Realism in the New

    Princeton University Press After Civil Rights Racial Realism in the New

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhat role should racial difference play in the American workplace? As a nation, we rely on civil rights law to address this question, and the monumental Civil Rights Act of 1964 seemingly answered it: race must not be a factor in workplace decisions. In After Civil Rights, John Skrentny contends that after decades of mass immigration, many employerTrade ReviewWinner of the 2014 Richard A. Lester Award for the Outstanding Book in Industrial Relations and Labor Economics, Industrial Relations Section of Princeton University Finalist for the 2014 Benjamin L. Hooks Institute for Social Change National Book Award, The University of Memphis Honorable Mention for the 2015 Oliver Cromwell Cox Book Award, Racial and Ethnic Minorities Section of the American Sociological Association "After Civil Rights makes a compelling case for the pervasiveness of race-conscious employment practices."--Glenn Altschuler, Florida Courier "John Skrentny, Professor of Sociology and Co-Director of the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC-San Diego, gives readers a well-researched, thoroughly documented and provocative work, presenting his theory for how employers view race in the workplace in the USA... Skrentny's chapter on racial realism, and its corollary, immigrant realism, in the low-wage workplace, is one I wish I had written... His account of how the law works in practice and on the ground is a great read for those interested in legal studies, history, political science, sociology or civil rights."--Leticia Saucedo, LSE Review of Books "If you want to explore deeper social policy, it is worth a read."--Barry H. Dyller, Trial "With the book's over 1,300 notes, scores of case law findings, and dozens of studies on race and labor market outcomes, it is impossible not to be impressed by Skrentny's erudition, research prowess, and deft ability to link multiple academic disciplines under one driving question... If you are a race, labor, immigration, or legal scholar you should absolutely read this book. You will never think about Title VII or the intersection of race and employment decisions in the same way again."--Charles A. Gallagher, American Journal of Sociology "Skrentny shows that in many sectors of the labor market, race is used in ways that were unanticipated when the 1964 Civil Rights Act was enacted... [His] account of racial realism in the low-skilled sector is chilling."--Kevin Lang, Journal of Economic Literature "This book skillfully presents comprehensive empirical research and is written in a conversational style accessible to a wide audience."--Nigel Carter, Transfer "[An] important and thought-provoking book."--Anthony S. Chen, Social Service Review "Skrentny has authored a fascinating book that is filled with law, information about how employers operate notwithstanding the law, and empirical evidence that supports and, at times, contradicts some employers' beliefs about the usefulness of employing race as a qualifier for jobs. This empirical research should be useful to lawyers who litigate these cases using Title VII. And Skrentny comes up with a cross-disciplinary approach to solving problems. Not all of his solutions are politically or constitutionally possible, but the legislative solutions he suggests are interesting and innovative, and, perhaps in the future, may be effective."--Ann C. McGinley, Tulsa Law Review "After Civil Rights not only contributes valuably to our understanding of how race figures into employment practices at the contemporary American workplace, it also succeeds in making the case for renewing the debate about where law and public policy should go from here."--Anthony S. Chen, Social Service Review "Sociologist John D. Skrentny has written an important and original book examining the fundamental role played by race in hiring and other personnel decisions in the modern American workplace. The originality of his premise calls attention to a phenomenon that everyone knows about but rarely discusses as he investigates the ways in which racial considerations are taken into account by employers for a wide range of reasons, even though in principle this practice was prohibited by the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and justly celebrated as a landmark statute of historic importance. Skrentny obtains remarkable mileage by exploring this simple yet apparently paradoxical state of affairs in depth and by avoiding judgmental impulses that frequently arise."--Gavin Wright, Journal of American StudiesTable of ContentsList of Figures and Tables ix Preface xi Chapter 1 Managing Race in the American Workplace 1 Chapter 2 Leverage Racial Realism in the Professions and Business 38 Chapter 3 We the People Racial Realism in Politics and Government 89 Chapter 4 Displaying Race for Dollars Racial Realism in Media and Entertainment 153 Chapter 5 The Jungle Revisited? Racial Realism in the Low-Skilled Sector 216 Chapter 6 Bringing Practice, Law, and Values Together 265 Notes 291 Index 383

    1 in stock

    £23.80

  • Defend the Sacred

    Princeton University Press Defend the Sacred

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"Finalist for the Award for Excellence in the Study of Religion, Analytical-Descriptive Studies, American Academy of Religion""Finalist for the PROSE Award in Legal Studies and Criminology, Association of American Publishers""An immensely validating book for advocates and community members immersed in Indigenous Peoples’ religious freedom." * Harvard Law Review *"An exemplary model of interdisciplinary scholarship, McNally’s book brings much-needed critical attention to the religious claims of Native peoples and the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead in securing greater legal protection for Native religious freedom."---N. Bruce Duthu, Native American and Indigenous Studies"Comprehensive and widely accessible. . . . McNally successfully exposes the real breadth of Native American religious freedom discourse, making this text an important read for those working in law and policy on the ground as much as those students and scholars working at the intersections of law, religion, and Indigenous studies."---Nicholas Shrubsole, Religious Studies Review

    Out of stock

    £84.00

  • Defend the Sacred

    Princeton University Press Defend the Sacred

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"Finalist for the Award for Excellence in the Study of Religion, Analytical-Descriptive Studies, American Academy of Religion""Finalist for the PROSE Award in Legal Studies and Criminology, Association of American Publishers""An immensely validating book for advocates and community members immersed in Indigenous Peoples’ religious freedom." * Harvard Law Review *"An exemplary model of interdisciplinary scholarship, McNally’s book brings much-needed critical attention to the religious claims of Native peoples and the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead in securing greater legal protection for Native religious freedom."---N. Bruce Duthu, Native American and Indigenous Studies"Comprehensive and widely accessible. . . . McNally successfully exposes the real breadth of Native American religious freedom discourse, making this text an important read for those working in law and policy on the ground as much as those students and scholars working at the intersections of law, religion, and Indigenous studies."---Nicholas Shrubsole, Religious Studies Review

    2 in stock

    £23.80

  • Judging the Boy Scouts of America

    MP-KAN Uni Press of Kansas Judging the Boy Scouts of America

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis

    Out of stock

    £31.16

  • Race Sex and the Freedom to Marry  Loving v.

    University Press of Kansas Race Sex and the Freedom to Marry Loving v.

    3 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    3 in stock

    £24.26

  • The Journey to Separate but Equal  Madame Decuirs

    MP-KAN Uni Press of Kansas The Journey to Separate but Equal Madame Decuirs

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTells the story of how, in Hall v. Decuir, the post-Civil War US Supreme Court took its first step toward perpetuating the subjugation of the non-White population of the United States by actively preventing a Southern state from prohibiting segregation on a riverboat in the coasting trade on the Mississippi River.Trade Review"Beermann puts his expertise to good use while also enriching the story with historical sources and context. He draws on historians’ work to discuss Reconstruction and the place of free people of color in Louisiana."—Journal of Southern History"Beermann’s skillful discussion of the DeCuir litigation provides important insights into the lawyers and jurists who played critical roles in the case."—Journal of Interdisciplinary History"This extensively researched volume should appeal not only to those interested in the judiciary and civil rights but also to anyone curious about life and culture in south Louisiana during the immediate post-Civil War Era."—Journal of Supreme Court History "Racism in the United States dismantled the Civil War’s legal achievements and built the world of continuing and expanding racialized segregation, deprivations, and indignities—but how did this come to pass? It took the particularly effective combination of White resentment, judicial activism, legal abstractions, and political backlash to strip free people of color of rights, wealth, and status as shown in this detailed yet vivid and accessible account by Jack Beermann. Thanks to this book, the little-remembered Supreme Court rejection of state antidiscrimination laws and the valiant but unsuccessful efforts of Josephine Decuir and her lawyers take their rightful place in the crucial reckoning with vigorous federal destruction of equal treatment in the United States. Read this book to understand how ‘technicalities’ of inheritance law practice, the ‘dormant Commerce Clause,’ and Southern transportation policies mixed with White status desires to block equal treatment laws and create the ‘separate but equal’ regime."—Martha Minow, 300th Anniversary University Professor and former dean of Harvard Law School, and author of In Brown’s Wake: Legacies of America’s Educational Landmark"It’s about time the much-neglected US Supreme Court ruling Hall v. Decuir (1878) received serious book-length attention, for this ‘long-forgotten’ decision is more than an ironic milestone on the road to Plessy. In Jack Beermann’s telling, it is no less a poignant turning point in the decisive marginalization of nineteenth-century Louisiana’s mixed-race community. We owe him a huge debt for wresting this maddeningly tragic story from history’s hidden shadows."—Lawrence N. Powell, professor emeritus of history, Tulane University, and author of The Accidental City: Improvising New OrleansTable of Contents Preface and Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Louisiana’s and the Decuir and Dubuclet Families 2. Madame Decuir Returns from France and Hires New Lawyers 3. Madame Decuir’s Journey and Reconstruction 4. Madame Decuir’s Suit against Captain Benson 5. Judge Collum Decides 6. The Louisiana Supreme Court Affirms 7. Captain Benson Takes His Case to the US Supreme Court 8. Louisiana (and the Entire South) Redeemed 9. The Supreme Court Decides 10. The Completion of the Law’s Journey to “Equal, but Separate” Epilogue Appendix: The Commerce Clause Notes Index

    1 in stock

    £23.16

  • Human rights under the Malawian constitution

    Juta & Company Ltd Human rights under the Malawian constitution

    15 in stock

    15 in stock

    £42.34

  • Human dignity

    Juta & Company Ltd Human dignity

    15 in stock

    15 in stock

    £50.00

  • Toleration on Trial

    Lexington Books Toleration on Trial

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewThis rich book illuminates toleration at a time of fear. Ranging from individual psychology to institutional arrangements, from law to norms, from religion to sexuality, and from West to East, the volume's sharply-etched essays offer guides to vexing challenges posed by human pluralism. -- Ira Katznelson, Ruggles Professor of Political Science and History, Columbia UniversityTable of ContentsChapter 1 Table of Contents Chapter 2 Preface Chapter 3 Acknowledgements Chapter 4 Biographies of the Authors Chapter 5 Introduction Part 6 I Conceptualizing Toleration Chapter 7 1 The Limits of Toleration Chapter 8 2 Institutionalizing Toleration Chapter 9 3 Toleration and Self-Skepticism Chapter 10 Commentary: Liberal Toleration, Recognition, and Same-Sex Marriage: A Response to Richard Dees and Elisabetta Galeotti Chapter 10 Commentary: Tolerant Institutions Part 12 II Toleration and Sexuality Chapter 13 4 Of Socinians and Homosexuals: Trust and the LImits of Toleration Chapter 14 5 Toleration as Recognition: The Case for Same-Sex Marriage Part 15 III Toleration and Religion Chapter 16 6 Tropes and Challenges of Islamic Toleration Chapter 17 7 Toleration in a Modern Islamic Polity: Contemporary Islamist Views Chapter 17 9 The Authoritarian Dynamic: Racial, Political, and Moral Intolerance Under Conditions of Societal Threat Chapter 19 8 Reason, Tradition, and Authority: Religion and the Indian State Chapter 20 Commentary: Muslim Societies, Muslim Minorities Part 21 IV Toleration and Psychology Chapter 22 10 Is Intolerance Incorrigible? An Analysis of Change Among Russians Chapter 23 Commentary: Institutions, Individuals, and the Sources of Toleration

    Out of stock

    £91.80

  • Toleration on Trial

    Lexington Books Toleration on Trial

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewThis rich book illuminates toleration at a time of fear. Ranging from individual psychology to institutional arrangements, from law to norms, from religion to sexuality, and from West to East, the volume's sharply-etched essays offer guides to vexing challenges posed by human pluralism. -- Ira Katznelson, Ruggles Professor of Political Science and History, Columbia UniversityTable of ContentsChapter 1 Table of Contents Chapter 2 Preface Chapter 3 Acknowledgements Chapter 4 Biographies of the Authors Chapter 5 Introduction Part 6 I Conceptualizing Toleration Chapter 7 1 The Limits of Toleration Chapter 8 2 Institutionalizing Toleration Chapter 9 3 Toleration and Self-Skepticism Chapter 10 Commentary: Liberal Toleration, Recognition, and Same-Sex Marriage: A Response to Richard Dees and Elisabetta Galeotti Chapter 10 Commentary: Tolerant Institutions Part 12 II Toleration and Sexuality Chapter 13 4 Of Socinians and Homosexuals: Trust and the LImits of Toleration Chapter 14 5 Toleration as Recognition: The Case for Same-Sex Marriage Part 15 III Toleration and Religion Chapter 16 6 Tropes and Challenges of Islamic Toleration Chapter 17 7 Toleration in a Modern Islamic Polity: Contemporary Islamist Views Chapter 17 9 The Authoritarian Dynamic: Racial, Political, and Moral Intolerance Under Conditions of Societal Threat Chapter 19 8 Reason, Tradition, and Authority: Religion and the Indian State Chapter 20 Commentary: Muslim Societies, Muslim Minorities Part 21 IV Toleration and Psychology Chapter 22 10 Is Intolerance Incorrigible? An Analysis of Change Among Russians Chapter 23 Commentary: Institutions, Individuals, and the Sources of Toleration

    Out of stock

    £42.30

  • Latinos and the Voting Rights ACT The Search for

    Lexington Books Latinos and the Voting Rights ACT The Search for

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThis book explores congressional redistricting, the relevance of the Voting Rights Act, and the legal concept of racial purpose, focusing on the role race and racism played in the Texas redistricting process and the stateâs 2011Voter Identification Law. The author makes a case for the use of mixed-methods research techniques in litigation research.Trade ReviewThis book is a deep dive into the racism underlying passage of a discriminatory redistricting plan and a discriminatory voter identification law (SB14), both approved in Texas during the 2011 legislative session. Flores combines blow-by-blow accounts of the passage of those controversial measures, a legal investigation into the degree to which each violated the rights of Latinos and thus the Voting Rights Act, and the history of race relations in Texas, all framed by the Supreme Court’s discussion of discriminatory purpose in Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Development Corp (1977). The book tells the rich and detailed story of racial animosity among Republican supporters of the two measures, as well as legislators’ use of 'racist shields' and their refusal to discuss how SB14 might unfairly restrict Latino participation. Flores speaks powerfully to the history of race relations in Texas, where Latinos 'find themselves being used as a buffer race between Anglos and African Americans,' and the inattention of courts to the many ways that the two minority communities differ. He briefly touches on the impact of Shelby County v. Holder (2012), and calls for a recommitment to the proposition that all citizens, including Latino citizens, should have an equal electoral voice. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate, research, and professional collections. * CHOICE *This impressive and important volume explores some of the ways in which law has been used in recent times to disempower minority voters and distort democracy in the United States…. Flores provides an insider’s view of this litigation and produces a richly detailed and nuanced narrative based on voluminous documentary evidence related to both cases…. Overall, this book shows the continuing relevance of race and racism in U.S. politics and policy and some ways in which racial prejudice may distort American democracy. It also outlines a promising methodology for scholars and legal activists alike to examine and, when relevant, demonstrate racial motivations in governmental actions. This study is a model of politically engaged research that makes significant contributions to the jurisprudence of equal protection, social science methods, and critical race studies. The descriptions and analyses regarding the role of race and racism in official governmental actions constituting the core of the research described in this volume are especially timely given our current politics, in which political rhetoric, policy proposals, and the actions of public agencies are increasingly challenged by political and legal activists and social movements. * Law and Politics Book Review *Henry Flores analyzes southwestern history, constitutional law and litigation to unravel the racial bias behind efforts to limit the influence of minority voters. With more than thirty years’ experience as an expert witness in voting rights cases, Flores offers the reader a bird’s eye view of the players and their motivations in southwestern electoral politics. He unravels the web of contested ideas, ideology and social science analysis that play out in contemporary voting rights struggles. Highly recommended. -- Benjamin Marquez, Professor of Political Science, University of Wisconsin, MadisonProfessor Flores has performed an enormous service by illustrating the ways in which power and race intersect in the distribution of political power where there is a far-reaching incentive to keep the contemplation of race hidden. His close study of the Voting Rights Act and the actions of the Texas Legislature shows the pervasive impact of race on decisions making and the ways in which it deforms democracy. Anyone who wants to understand the ways in which our racial history has distorted representational rights needs to read this book. -- Gerald Torres, Jane M. G. Foster Professor of Law, Cornell University Law SchoolTable of ContentsChapter One: Uncovering Racial Purposes in Voting Rights Politics Chapter Two: In Search of Racism Chapter Three: Racism, the Arlington Heights Factos, and Latinos Chapter Four: Latino Identity, Whiteness, and Dual-Race Theory Chapter Five: “Do Citizens Select Legislators or Do Legislators Select Their Constituents?” Chapter Six: There is a Method to This Madness Chapter Seven: Strategic Racism Uncovered

    Out of stock

    £98.10

  • New Family Values Liberty Equality Diversity

    Rowman & Littlefield New Family Values Liberty Equality Diversity

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisA critical analysis of those who argue that law and policy should be used to foster one model of family - the intact two-parent (heterosexual) family. The author argues that this position does not adequately address the problem of family dissolution and that it strains personal liberty.Trade ReviewNew Family Values is an extraordinarily good book. Struening uses an impressive array of facts to convincingly argue against 'family communitarians' like Elshtain and Galston, and in favor of supporting diversity in family forms. Having just completed a survey of the relevant literature, I know that there is really nothing out there like it. -- James P. Sterba, professor, University of Notre DameEmploying simple but elegant prose, Karen Struening offers an insightful critique of those who argue that the welfare of our children requires reinforcement of the traditional nuclear family. Her timely defense of nontraditional forms of the family, based on a sophisticated interpretation of the fundamental principles of liberalism, will be of interest to feminists, to lesbian and gay activists, and, indeed, to all who believe that meeting the needs of our children does not require sacrificing the needs of those who share responsibility for this most important task. -- Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn, Whitman CollegeNew Family Values reminds us that a certain model of the family is implicated in the policing of our sexualities, our personal freedoms, and gender itself. It is an important intervention into current debates about family values. -- Judith Grant, University of Southern CaliforniaNew Family Values forcefully and persuasively argues that the ability to choose the form of our intimate associations is a fundamental right. Moreover Struening argues that family diversity contributes to the health of the greater society. This bookis essential reading for all concerned with articulating why we should embrace a new form of family values for a feminist and progressive politics.... -- Lori Marso, Union College; author of (Un)Manly Citizens: J. J. Rousseau's Subversive WomenStreuning provides a thoughtful analysis of the positive possibilities of diverse, especially gay and lesbian families. * Journal of Marriage and Family *Karen Struening is one of the most promising scholars working in the fields of political theory, feminism, and public policy today. . . . Her work is political and legal theory at its best: she draws on a wide range of scholarship, thinks critically, and directly addresses issues fraught with normative implications. Struening has an admirable ability to translate complex technical issues in constitutional law, public policy, and normative theory into accessible prose and lucid argumentation. Her writing is engaged without being tendentious, learned without being obscure. -- Morris B. Kaplan, SUNY Purchase CollegeNew Family Values forcefully and persuasively argues that the ability to choose the form of our intimate associations is a fundamental right. Moreover Struening argues that family diversity contributes to the health of the greater society. This book is essential reading for all concerned with articulating why we should embrace a new form of family values for a feminist and progressive politics. -- Lori Marso, Union College; author of (Un)Manly Citizens: J. J. Rousseau's Subversive WomenStruening presents an insightful discussion of the arguments advanced by family communitarians. She summarizes their argumens cogently and presents an astute analysis of their structure. * Perspectives on Politics *Table of ContentsChapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Debating Family Values Chapter 3 Personal Liberty and the Right of Privacy Chapter 4 What Are Families For? An Argument for Diversity in Family Forms Chapter 5 Fatherless Families and the Reassertion of the Gender-Structured Family Chapter 6 Do Welfare Recipients Have a Right of Privacy? A Public-Private Paradox Chapter 7 Feminist Family Policies: A Comparison of Egalitarian and Caregiver Models Chapter 8 Conclusion

    Out of stock

    £123.00

  • Queers in Court

    Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Queers in Court

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisIn Queers in Court, Susan Gluck Mezey examines the contemporary battle for gay and lesbian rights in the United States, tracing the evolution of issues from same sex marriage and privacy rights to military service and employment discrimination. By combining analyses of nearly three hundred cases from both federal and state courts with detailed explorations of the paths these issues have taken through legislative and executive bodies, she provides the most comprehensive analysis of queer rights in law and policy to date. Both scholars seeking a case study in minority rights and those looking for a primer in gay and lesbian politics will find Mezey''s book of interest.Trade ReviewQueers in Court is a meticulously researched survey of gay rights cases in state and federal courts over the last fifty years. Susan Gluck Mezey provides a comprehensive and richly detailed reference that is indispensable to understanding the interplay in American policymaking among judges, other legal and political elites, and public opinion. A truly enlightening book. -- Daniel R. Pinello, author of Gay Rights and American Law and America?s Struggle for Same-Sex MarriageI learned a lot from reading Queers in Court, and expect to consult it many times. The book is must reading for students of gay and lesbian politics, but it will also be useful for anyone interested in social movements in the American courts. It provides that rare balance of a broad perspective that still includes all of the details specialists require. -- Clyde Wilcox, professor of government, Georgetown UniversityQueers in Court provides a nuanced historical survey that builds on the already-rich scholarly analysis of U.S. judicial rulings on sexual diversity. Susan Gluck Mezey’s background in the exploration of rights litigation by other traditionally-marginalized groups allows her to draw parallels to other struggles without ignoring the distinctive features of queer claims. She also punctures some of the myths about American judicial “activism”—pointing to the recurrent restraint of federal courts and of most state courts. This is a healthy response to both overly-optimistic litigants and highly-selective critics who don't want to believe that there are any LGBT claims that have popular support. -- David Rayside, Professor of Political Science and Director of the Mark S. Bonham Centre for Sexual Diversity Studies, University of TorontoI view the book as a welcome addition to a library supporting gay rights research and believe it would be useful to a broader audience of other scholars, activists, and advocates. -- Sharon Whitney * Journal of Law & Politics *A valuable resource for attorneys and scholars. * Booklist, September 28, 2009 *Queers in Court is an excellent overview of gay rights litigation in the U.S. It is thorough yet readable. It covers topics ranging from marriage to the military, it covers them over half a century of American history, it appreciates their nuances, and it places litigation in the context of public opinion. Queers in Court would be useful in a college or law school classroom and it would also be good company on a long plane flight. In one volume, it provides a solid, well-rounded, easily-digested introduction to all of gay law. -- William Rubenstein, UCLA School of Law; Founding Director, Williams Institute on Sexual Orientation Law; and Former Director, ACLU Lesbian & Gay Rights ProjectOverall, the book makes a tremendous contribution to the study of judicial policymaking and to the study of sexuality and politics by chronicling, in great detail, the litigation surrounding important elements of LGBT family life....Mezey has created a tremendous resource of students and cholars of the courts and the study of sexuality. The author has taken great care in analyzing the reasoning of important cases....Overall, this book, particularly combined with Mezey*s QUEERS IN COURT, is an excellent addition to the growing scholarship on law, politics, and policies relating to sexual minorities and presents more evidence why this topic is particularly important for scholars of the judiciary. * Law and Politics Book Review *Table of ContentsChapter 1 Acknowledgements Chapter 2 Table of Cases Chapter 3 Introduction Chapter 4 1. Forging Gay Rights Activism Chapter 5 2. Litigating Equality and Privacy Rights Chapter 6 3. Struggling over Same Sex Marriage Chapter 7 4. Contesting Inequality in the Military Chapter 8 5. Challenging Employment Discrimination Chapter 9 Conclusion

    Out of stock

    £90.90

  • Queers in Court

    Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Queers in Court

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisIn Queers in Court, Susan Gluck Mezey examines the contemporary battle for gay and lesbian rights in the United States, tracing the evolution of issues from same sex marriage and privacy rights to military service and employment discrimination. By combining analyses of nearly three hundred cases from both federal and state courts with detailed explorations of the paths these issues have taken through legislative and executive bodies, she provides the most comprehensive analysis of queer rights in law and policy to date. Both scholars seeking a case study in minority rights and those looking for a primer in gay and lesbian politics will find Mezey''s book of interest.Trade ReviewQueers in Court is a meticulously researched survey of gay rights cases in state and federal courts over the last fifty years. Susan Gluck Mezey provides a comprehensive and richly detailed reference that is indispensable to understanding the interplay in American policymaking among judges, other legal and political elites, and public opinion. A truly enlightening book. -- Daniel R. Pinello, author of Gay Rights and American Law and America?s Struggle for Same-Sex MarriageI learned a lot from reading Queers in Court, and expect to consult it many times. The book is must reading for students of gay and lesbian politics, but it will also be useful for anyone interested in social movements in the American courts. It provides that rare balance of a broad perspective that still includes all of the details specialists require. -- Clyde Wilcox, professor of government, Georgetown UniversityQueers in Court provides a nuanced historical survey that builds on the already-rich scholarly analysis of U.S. judicial rulings on sexual diversity. Susan Gluck Mezey’s background in the exploration of rights litigation by other traditionally-marginalized groups allows her to draw parallels to other struggles without ignoring the distinctive features of queer claims. She also punctures some of the myths about American judicial “activism”—pointing to the recurrent restraint of federal courts and of most state courts. This is a healthy response to both overly-optimistic litigants and highly-selective critics who don't want to believe that there are any LGBT claims that have popular support. -- David Rayside, Professor of Political Science and Director of the Mark S. Bonham Centre for Sexual Diversity Studies, University of TorontoI view the book as a welcome addition to a library supporting gay rights research and believe it would be useful to a broader audience of other scholars, activists, and advocates. -- Sharon Whitney * Journal of Law & Politics *A valuable resource for attorneys and scholars. * Booklist, September 28, 2009 *Queers in Court is an excellent overview of gay rights litigation in the U.S. It is thorough yet readable. It covers topics ranging from marriage to the military, it covers them over half a century of American history, it appreciates their nuances, and it places litigation in the context of public opinion. Queers in Court would be useful in a college or law school classroom and it would also be good company on a long plane flight. In one volume, it provides a solid, well-rounded, easily-digested introduction to all of gay law. -- William Rubenstein, UCLA School of Law; Founding Director, Williams Institute on Sexual Orientation Law; and Former Director, ACLU Lesbian & Gay Rights ProjectOverall, the book makes a tremendous contribution to the study of judicial policymaking and to the study of sexuality and politics by chronicling, in great detail, the litigation surrounding important elements of LGBT family life....Mezey has created a tremendous resource of students and cholars of the courts and the study of sexuality. The author has taken great care in analyzing the reasoning of important cases....Overall, this book, particularly combined with Mezey*s QUEERS IN COURT, is an excellent addition to the growing scholarship on law, politics, and policies relating to sexual minorities and presents more evidence why this topic is particularly important for scholars of the judiciary. * Law and Politics Book Review *Table of ContentsChapter 1 Acknowledgements Chapter 2 Table of Cases Chapter 3 Introduction Chapter 4 1. Forging Gay Rights Activism Chapter 5 2. Litigating Equality and Privacy Rights Chapter 6 3. Struggling over Same Sex Marriage Chapter 7 4. Contesting Inequality in the Military Chapter 8 5. Challenging Employment Discrimination Chapter 9 Conclusion

    Out of stock

    £36.00

  • No Litmus Test Law Versus Politics in the

    Rowman & Littlefield No Litmus Test Law Versus Politics in the

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisDefends the possibility of principled legal decision-making against the attacks of both the right and the left. From Bush v Gore to the war in Iraq, this book demonstrates that even when the law provides no right answers, it offers tools for distinguishing good arguments from bad ones.Trade ReviewWritten to be accessible to the intelligent layman while broadening even the seasoned expert's understanding, Michael Dorf's colorful, creative and invariably clear analyses of the most vexing constitutional controversies of our time add up to a compelling case for an approach to law and to judging that rejects the extremes of both right and left — and emerges with a position more reasonable and reasoned than either and both more interesting, and more surprising, than a simple average of the two. -- Laurence H. Tribe, Harvard UniversityProfessor Dorf strives for fairness throughout, arguing against fetishizing the law at the cost of losing valuable nonlegal perspectives. * Harvard Law Review, March 2007 *A distinguished law professor shows that law is—and must be—something more than politics by other means. Using contemporary examples, many of which the reader will find familiar, the author teases out a remarkably coherent theory of principled judging. This splendid effort takes the reader beyond hollow labels such as "judicial activist" and "strict constructionist" and gives important insights into the kind of thinking that we should look for in a federal judge or justice -- Alex Kozinski, Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, Ninth CircuitTable of ContentsChapter 1 Acknowledgements Chapter 2 About the Author Chapter 3 Introduction Part 4 I. The Difference Between Law and Politics Chapter 5 1. They Are All Activists Now Chapter 6 2. Is There a Distinction Between Law and Politics? Yes, and the Bush v. Gore Decision Proves It Chapter 7 3. Clarence Thomas's Challenge to the Rehnquist Court's Vision of Representative Government Chapter 8 4. Does Federal Tort Law Reform Unduly Infringe State Sovereignty? Part 9 II. Aid and Comfort to the Enemy Chapter 10 5. The Supreme Court Case That Pits Free Speech Against Church-State Separation Chapter 11 6. How Abortion Politics Impedes Clear Thinking on Other Issues Involving Fetuses Chapter 12 Why the Lawsuit Challenging Tennessee's "Choose Life" License Places Should Fail Chapter 13 Three Bad Reasons — and One Very Good Reason — to Oppose a Constitutional Amendment Barring Same-Sex Marriage Chapter 14 A Federal Appeals Court Rules That Universities Can Bar Military Recruiters Without Losing Federal Grant Money: A Welcome Result Based on Flawed Reasoning Chapter 15 10. Justice Scalia's Persuasive but Elitist Response to the Duck Hunting Controversy Chapter 16 11. Can a State Make It a Crime to Refuse to Identify Yourself to the Police? In a Narrow Ruling, the Supreme Court Says Yes Chapter 17 12. Why "Swift Boat Veterans for Truth" and other "527" Organizations Can't Be Silenced Chapter 18 13. Does the Constitution Permit the Blue States to Secede? With Permission, Perhaps; Unilaterally, No Chapter 19 14. How the Schiavo Federal Court Case Might Have Been Won Part 20 III. In Defense of Liberal Judging Chapter 21 15. Washington Yankees in King Arthur's Court: The Supreme Court Journeys to 18th Century England to Define the Rights of 21st Century Americans Chapter 22 16. How a Recent Supreme Court Public Housing Decision "Exiles Compassion from the Province of Judging" Chapter 23 17. Could Justice Scalia's Affirmative Action Dissent Become Self-Fulfilling Prophecy? Chapter 24 18. Is There a Constitutional Right to Sexual Privacy? Finding None, a Federal Appeals Court Upholds Alabama's Sex Toy Prohibition Part 25 IV. Liberty, Security, and War Chapter 26 19. What is an "Unlawful Combatant," and Why It Matters: The Status of Detained al Qaeda and Taliban Fighters Chapter 27 20. The Justice Department's Change of Heart Regarding Torture: A Fair-Minded and Praiseworthy Analysis That Could Have Gone Still Further Chapter 28 21. Who Decides Whether Yaser Hamdi, or Any Other Citizen, Is an Enemy Combatant? Chapter 29 22. Bush Loses in the Supreme Court and America Wins Chapter 30 23. Is Iraq in "Material Breach" of its Obligations under the U.N. Resolution? A Geopolitical Question, Not Simply a Legal One Chapter 31 24. Is the War on Iraq Lawful? Chapter 32 25. Why Congressional Power to Declare War Does Not Provide an Effective Check on the President Chapter 33 26. Kerry Stands By His Iraq Vote, and with Bush, Against Constitutional Principles Part 34 V. The Global Village Chapter 35 27. When American States Execute Citizens of Foreign Countries: The Case of Gerardo Valdez Chapter 36 28. Can One National Arrest the Foreign Minister of Another? The World Court Says No Chapter 37 29. Should Foreigners Be Permitted to Make Campaign Contributions to U.S. Candidates? Surprisingly, the Answer May Be Yes Chapter 38 30. The Hidden International Influence in the Supreme Court Decision Barring Executions of the Mentally Retarded Chapter 39 31. The Use of Foreign Law in American Constitutional Interpretation: A Revealing Colloquy Between Justices Scalia and Breyer Chapter 40 32. Can Ethnic Hatred Be Eliminated by Eliminating Ethnicity? The Rwanda Experiment Chapter 41 33. What a Chinese Height Discrimination Case Says About Chinese (and American) Constitutional Law Part 42 The Rule of Law(yers) Chapter 43 34. Debate over an ABA Legal Ethics Rule Underscores Lawyers' Competing Obligations to Keep Secret and to Disclose Chapter 44 35. Can the Legal Profession Improve its Image? Americans Believe Lawyers to Be Necessary but Dishonest, Survey Finds Chapter 45 36. Americans' Faith in the Supreme Court — And in the Constitution: Survey Shows Bush v. Gore's Effect was Limited Chapter 46 37. Whose Constitution Is it Anyway? What Americans Don't Know About the Constitution — And Why It Matters Chapter 47 38. Unsolicited Advice to Law School Applicants: With Prospects Newly Limited, Be Sure You Want to Become a Lawyer Chapter 48 39. How to "Think Like a Lawyer": Advice to New and Prospective Law Students Chapter 49 Appendix Chapter 50 Bibliographical Note Chapter 51 Index

    Out of stock

    £42.00

  • Jews and Human Rights Dancing at Three Weddings

    Rowman & Littlefield Jews and Human Rights Dancing at Three Weddings

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisAnalyzes the role of Jews in the formation of international human rights efforts throughout the US, Israel, and the Former Soviet Union. This work examines this human rights work as part of a total system of Jewish political commitments, a system shaped by both human rights history and Jewish history.Trade ReviewThis clear-eyed and comprehensive history of the significant Jewish involvement in international human rights breaks new scholarly ground. Galchinsky carefully delineates how external and internal pressures have shaped and transformed Jewish human rights agendas in Israel and on the worldwide stage. -- Judith R. Baskin, University of OregonMichael Galchinsky has given us an intricate picture of the personalities, politics, and practices that make up Jewish human rights activities in the contemporary world. He presents a nuanced view of the post-modern struggle to articulate a Jewish approach to human rights that is pulled in a variety of directions by often opposing forces. -- Peter J. Haas, Case Western Reserve UniversityThis book offers an original analysis of the crucial role that Jews have played in the rise of modern international human rights movements. It is strongest in its ability to understand the tensions that Jewish human rights activists face in trying to foster global human rights and human rights in Israel in the face of a pronounced bias against Israel in the so-called 'international human rights community.' A major contribution to the sociology of human rights in the modern worldddd -- Thomas Cushman, Wellesley CollegeThis is an important work. In his meticulous examination of three major instances of Jewish and Israeli human rights advocacy since World War II, Michael Galchinsky has elucidated the political and practical limits of this activism as well as the undoubted accomplishments. Highly recommended for students of contemporary history as well as for the general reader. -- Carole Fink, The Ohio State UniversityMichael Galchinsky's boundary-shattering analysis in Jews and Human Rights looks at all of the roles in the evolving world of 'human rights' assumed by Jews—Jews as victims and claimants, as organizers and theoreticians, as activists and critics. Galchinsky explores this complex and often contradictory and controversial relationship in a way to merge legal, cultural, and intellectual history into a readable narrative of the history of the Jews in the modern world. A brilliant book! -- Sander L. Gilman, Emory UniversityThis book offers an original analysis of the crucial role that Jews have played in the rise of modern international human rights movements. It is strongest in its ability to understand the tensions that Jewish human rights activists face in trying to foster global human rights and human rights in Israel in the face of a pronounced bias against Israel in the so-called 'international human rights community.' A major contribution to the sociology of human rights in the modern world -- Thomas Cushman, Wellesley CollegeThis is an important, timely and well-researched scholarly work. It presents a unique perspective of looking at the issue of human rights from the particular to the universal in the global age. An essential work for understanding the inter-related issues of human rights, Jewish activists, and Israel. -- Fred A. Lazin, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, IsraelThis book is informative and readable. Recommended. * CHOICE *More studies are needed that take what we know of complex transnational Jewish identities and examine their rich relationships with the state, including intergovernmental organizations such as the United Nations. In Dancing at Three Weddings, Michael Galchinsky marries the two. While many traditional histories examine genocide in graphic detail, Galchinsky's contribution is a catalog of the motivations and responses by a diverse community of Jews to deal with postwar tragedies. * American Jewish History *Since World War II, Jews, working alone or through NGOs, have been active in the international human rights movement. While many books have been written on the biblical and rabbinic context for Jewish involvement in social action, Galchinsky focuses instead on sociological and political motvies. The book includes extensive notes, bibliography, and index. Recommended for academic libraries. * AJL Newsletter, November/December 2009 *Table of ContentsChapter 1 Building Human Rights Chapter 2 Freeing Soviet Jews—and After Chapter 3 Jewish Responses to Non-Jewish Genocides Chapter 4 American Jews and Violations in Zion: A Case Study Chapter 5 Israeli, Jewish, Human Chapter 6 Appendix A: Genocides and Other Mass Killings Chapter 7 Appendix B: Israel's Adoption of Major Human Rights Treaties Chapter 8 Appendix C: Glossary of Abbreviations

    Out of stock

    £127.80

  • Jews and Human Rights Dancing at Three Weddings

    Rowman & Littlefield Publishers Jews and Human Rights Dancing at Three Weddings

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisAnalyzes the role of Jews in the formation of international human rights efforts throughout the US, Israel, and the Former Soviet Union. This work examines this human rights work as part of a total system of Jewish political commitments, a system shaped by both human rights history and Jewish history.Trade ReviewThis clear-eyed and comprehensive history of the significant Jewish involvement in international human rights breaks new scholarly ground. Galchinsky carefully delineates how external and internal pressures have shaped and transformed Jewish human rights agendas in Israel and on the worldwide stage. -- Judith R. Baskin, University of OregonMichael Galchinsky has given us an intricate picture of the personalities, politics, and practices that make up Jewish human rights activities in the contemporary world. He presents a nuanced view of the post-modern struggle to articulate a Jewish approach to human rights that is pulled in a variety of directions by often opposing forces. -- Peter J. Haas, Case Western Reserve UniversityThis book offers an original analysis of the crucial role that Jews have played in the rise of modern international human rights movements. It is strongest in its ability to understand the tensions that Jewish human rights activists face in trying to foster global human rights and human rights in Israel in the face of a pronounced bias against Israel in the so-called 'international human rights community.' A major contribution to the sociology of human rights in the modern worldddd -- Thomas Cushman, Wellesley CollegeThis is an important work. In his meticulous examination of three major instances of Jewish and Israeli human rights advocacy since World War II, Michael Galchinsky has elucidated the political and practical limits of this activism as well as the undoubted accomplishments. Highly recommended for students of contemporary history as well as for the general reader. -- Carole Fink, The Ohio State UniversityMichael Galchinsky's boundary-shattering analysis in Jews and Human Rights looks at all of the roles in the evolving world of 'human rights' assumed by Jews—Jews as victims and claimants, as organizers and theoreticians, as activists and critics. Galchinsky explores this complex and often contradictory and controversial relationship in a way to merge legal, cultural, and intellectual history into a readable narrative of the history of the Jews in the modern world. A brilliant book! -- Sander L. Gilman, Emory UniversityThis book offers an original analysis of the crucial role that Jews have played in the rise of modern international human rights movements. It is strongest in its ability to understand the tensions that Jewish human rights activists face in trying to foster global human rights and human rights in Israel in the face of a pronounced bias against Israel in the so-called 'international human rights community.' A major contribution to the sociology of human rights in the modern world -- Thomas Cushman, Wellesley CollegeThis is an important, timely and well-researched scholarly work. It presents a unique perspective of looking at the issue of human rights from the particular to the universal in the global age. An essential work for understanding the inter-related issues of human rights, Jewish activists, and Israel. -- Fred A. Lazin, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, IsraelThis book is informative and readable. Recommended. * CHOICE *More studies are needed that take what we know of complex transnational Jewish identities and examine their rich relationships with the state, including intergovernmental organizations such as the United Nations. In Dancing at Three Weddings, Michael Galchinsky marries the two. While many traditional histories examine genocide in graphic detail, Galchinsky's contribution is a catalog of the motivations and responses by a diverse community of Jews to deal with postwar tragedies. * American Jewish History *Since World War II, Jews, working alone or through NGOs, have been active in the international human rights movement. While many books have been written on the biblical and rabbinic context for Jewish involvement in social action, Galchinsky focuses instead on sociological and political motvies. The book includes extensive notes, bibliography, and index. Recommended for academic libraries. * AJL Newsletter, November/December 2009 *Table of ContentsChapter 1 Building Human Rights Chapter 2 Freeing Soviet Jews—and After Chapter 3 Jewish Responses to Non-Jewish Genocides Chapter 4 American Jews and Violations in Zion: A Case Study Chapter 5 Israeli, Jewish, Human Chapter 6 Appendix A: Genocides and Other Mass Killings Chapter 7 Appendix B: Israel's Adoption of Major Human Rights Treaties Chapter 8 Appendix C: Glossary of Abbreviations

    Out of stock

    £38.70

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