Description

Book Synopsis
Chance inevitably plays a role in law but it is not often that we consciously try to import an element of randomness into a legal process. Random Justice: On Lotteries and Legal Decision-Making explores the potential for the use of lotteries in social, and particularly legal, decision-making contexts. Utilizing a variety of disciplines and materials, Neil Duxbury considers in detail the history, advantages, and drawbacks of deciding issues of social significance by lot and argues that the value of the lottery as a legal decision-making device has generally been underestimated. The very fact that there exists widespread resistance to the use of lotteries for legal decision-making purposes betrays a commonly held belief that legal processes are generally more important than are legal outcomes. Where, owing to the existence of indeterminacy, the process of reasoning is likely to be excessively protracted and the reasons provided strongly contestable, the most cost-efficient and impartial

Trade Review
Neil Duxbury has added a sharply focused, but rich and informative, contribution to legal theoretical literature ... along the way one learns a host of fascinating and unfamiliar facts, and is introduced to bodies of scholarship the existence of which one may never have suspected. The range of material that has been drawn together in this book is quite breathtaking. * N. E. Simmonds, The Cambridge Law Journal *
Duxbury's Random Justice is stimulationd throughout and wonderfully researched...his book has encouraged me to reflect more on the special sort of fairness that is present in randomization, and what all this might reveal about reason and the rule of law. * Bruce Chapman University of Toronto Law Journal Vol 50 2000 *
History remembers books which make a real challenge to our thinking, and this is such a book. * David Jabbari, Legal Studies *
this is a fascinating work and a piece of great scholarship. * David Jabbari, Legal Studies *
the author has, once again, succeeded in demonstrating the rigour and breadth of his scholarship * David Jabbari, Legal Studies *
the book is an excellent resource for the growing body of academics interested in chance and lotteries * Barbara Goodwin, THES *
Among legal academics, Duxbury's explicit challenge to the supremacy - or hubris - of reason should spark some fireworks * Barbara Goodwin, THES *

Table of Contents
Introduction ; The Spectre of Chance ; Contextualizing the Lottery ; Relying on Luck ; Dicing with Justice ; Lotteries Within Legal Frameworks ; Conclusion ; Index

Random Justice On Lotteries and Legal DecisionMaking

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    £999.99

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    A Hardback by Neil Duxbury

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      View other formats and editions of Random Justice On Lotteries and Legal DecisionMaking by Neil Duxbury

      Publisher: Oxford University Press
      Publication Date: 7/29/1999 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780198268253, 978-0198268253
      ISBN10: 0198268254

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Chance inevitably plays a role in law but it is not often that we consciously try to import an element of randomness into a legal process. Random Justice: On Lotteries and Legal Decision-Making explores the potential for the use of lotteries in social, and particularly legal, decision-making contexts. Utilizing a variety of disciplines and materials, Neil Duxbury considers in detail the history, advantages, and drawbacks of deciding issues of social significance by lot and argues that the value of the lottery as a legal decision-making device has generally been underestimated. The very fact that there exists widespread resistance to the use of lotteries for legal decision-making purposes betrays a commonly held belief that legal processes are generally more important than are legal outcomes. Where, owing to the existence of indeterminacy, the process of reasoning is likely to be excessively protracted and the reasons provided strongly contestable, the most cost-efficient and impartial

      Trade Review
      Neil Duxbury has added a sharply focused, but rich and informative, contribution to legal theoretical literature ... along the way one learns a host of fascinating and unfamiliar facts, and is introduced to bodies of scholarship the existence of which one may never have suspected. The range of material that has been drawn together in this book is quite breathtaking. * N. E. Simmonds, The Cambridge Law Journal *
      Duxbury's Random Justice is stimulationd throughout and wonderfully researched...his book has encouraged me to reflect more on the special sort of fairness that is present in randomization, and what all this might reveal about reason and the rule of law. * Bruce Chapman University of Toronto Law Journal Vol 50 2000 *
      History remembers books which make a real challenge to our thinking, and this is such a book. * David Jabbari, Legal Studies *
      this is a fascinating work and a piece of great scholarship. * David Jabbari, Legal Studies *
      the author has, once again, succeeded in demonstrating the rigour and breadth of his scholarship * David Jabbari, Legal Studies *
      the book is an excellent resource for the growing body of academics interested in chance and lotteries * Barbara Goodwin, THES *
      Among legal academics, Duxbury's explicit challenge to the supremacy - or hubris - of reason should spark some fireworks * Barbara Goodwin, THES *

      Table of Contents
      Introduction ; The Spectre of Chance ; Contextualizing the Lottery ; Relying on Luck ; Dicing with Justice ; Lotteries Within Legal Frameworks ; Conclusion ; Index

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