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Hannah Arendt and the Law
Hannah Arendt and the Law

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  • 电子书积分:13 积分如何计算积分?
  • 作 者:Goldoni
  • 出 版 社:Hart Publishing Limited;International Specialized Book Services [Distributor]
  • 出版年份:2012
  • ISBN:9781849461436;1849461430
  • 页数:362 页
图书介绍:
《Hannah Arendt and the Law》目录
标签:

Introduction&Chris McCorkindale and Marco Goldoni 1

PART Ⅰ: BETWEEN NOMOS AND LEX: THE CONCEPT OF LAW IN HANNAH ARENDT'S POLITICAL THOUGHT 13

1. Law beyond Command? An Evaluation of Arendt's Understanding of Law&Keith Breen 15

2. Between Freedom and Law: Hannah Arendt on the Promise of Modern Revolution and the Burden of 'The Tradition'&Michael A Wilkinson 35

3. Law and the Space of Appearance in Arendt's Thought&Johan van der Walt 63

4. A Lawless Legacy: Hannah Arendt and Giorgio Agamben&Vivian Liska 89

PART Ⅱ: ON CONSTITUTIONALISM AND INSTITUTIONS 99

5. Arendt's Constitutional Question&Emilios Christodoulidis and Andrew Schaap 101

6. The Role of the Supreme Court in Arendt's Political Constitution&Marco Goldoni and Chris McCorkindale 117

7. A Constitutional Niche for Civil Disobedience? Reflections on Arendt&William Smith 133

8. The Search for a New Beginning: Hannah Arendt and Karl Jaspers as Critics of West German Parliamentarianism&Kari Palonen 151

PART Ⅲ: BEYOND THE NATION STATE: HANNAH ARENDT AND INTERNATIONAL LAW 171

A. Public International Law 171

9. Facing the Abyss: International Law Before the Political&Florian Hoffmann 173

10. International Law and Human Plurality in the Shadow of Totalitarianism: Hannah Arendt and Raphael Lemkin&Seyla Benhabib 191

11. Power and the Rule of Law in Arendt's Thought&Hauke Brunkhorst 215

12. Hannah Arendt and the Languages of Global Governance&Jan Klabbers 229

B. International Criminal Law 249

13. 'How Dangerous it Gan Be to Be Innocent': War and the Law in the Thought of Hannah Arendt&Patricia Owens 251

14. Hannah Arendt's Judgement of Bureaucracy&Leora Bilsky 271

15. Arendt in Jerusalem, Demjanjuk in Munich&Lawrence Douglas 291

PART Ⅳ: THE RIGHT TO HAVE RIGHTS 305

16. Between Politics and Law: Hannah Arendt and the Subject of Rights&Charles Barbour 307

17. Citizens and Persons: Legal Status and Human Rights in Hannah Arendt&James Bohman 321

18. The Right to Have Rights: From Human Rights to Citizens' Rights and Back&Samantha Besson 335

Index 357

Introduction&Marco Goldoni and Chris McCorkindale 1

Ⅰ. Arendt's Political Turn 2

Ⅱ. The Juridical Person 6

Ⅲ. Crises of the Republic 9

PART Ⅰ: BETWEEN NOMOS AND LEX: THE CONCEPT OF LAW IN HANNAH ARENDT'S POLITICAL THOUGHT 13

1. Law beyond Command? An Evaluation of Arendt's Understanding of Law&Keith Breen 15

Ⅰ. Introduction 15

Ⅱ. The Prejudices of the 'Great Tradition' 17

Ⅲ. Limiting Walls and Lasting Ties--Nomas and Lex 20

Ⅳ. Law without an Absolute, Foundation without Commandment? 24

Ⅴ. Conclusion 32

2. Between Freedom and Law: Hannah Arendt on the Promise of Modern Revolution and the Burden of 'The Tradition'&Michael A Wilkinson 35

Ⅰ. Introduction 35

Ⅱ. Critique of the Tradition: Arendt's Conception of Political Freedom 37

Ⅲ. Escape from the Tradition: Political Freedom in the Modern Revolutionary Imagination 41

Ⅳ. The Burden of 'the Tradition': the Persistence of the Absolute in the Juridical Imagination 45

Ⅴ. The Liberation of the Tradition: The Emergence of Homo Faber from Modern Revolution 50

Ⅵ. Conceptualising Law Beyond 'The Tradition': Nomos or Lex? 53

Ⅶ. Concluding Remarks: Reconciling Political Freedom and Constitutional Authority? 58

3. Law and the Space of Appearance in Arendt's Thought&Johan van der Walt 63

Ⅰ. Introduction 63

Ⅱ. Appearance, Reality, Truth 66

Ⅲ. Appearing: The Phainesthai of the Phenomenon 70

Ⅳ. Her Shadow and its Shade 72

Ⅴ. The Literary Exception 76

Ⅵ. Literary Depths and the 'Shallowness' of Law 77

Ⅶ. The Inverse or Negative Depth of the Law 82

Ⅷ. Back to the Beginning 87

4. A Lawless Legacy: Hannah Arendt and Giorgio Agamben&Vivian Liska 89

PART Ⅱ: ON CONSTITUTIONALISM AND INSTITUTIONS 99

5. Arendt's Constitutional Question&Emilios Christodoulidis and Andrew Schaap 101

Ⅰ. Unburdening the Constitution 101

Ⅱ. Domesticating the Agon 108

Ⅲ. Depleting the Space of Appearances 114

6. The Role of the Supreme Court in Arendt's Political Constitution&Marco Goldoni and Chris McCorkindale 117

Ⅰ. The Supreme Court Between Power and Authority 119

Ⅱ. Powerless But Lastingjudges 122

Ⅲ. Reflections on Little Rock 125

Ⅳ. Towards Civil Disobedience 127

Ⅴ. Concluding Remarks 130

7. A Constitutional Niche for Civil Disobedience? Reflections on Arendt&William. Smith 133

Ⅰ. Civil Disobedience and the Revolutionary Spirit 134

A. Civil Disobedience, Conscience and Law 135

B. Civil Disobedience, Consent and the Republic 137

C. Reclaiming the Revolutionary Spirit 139

Ⅱ. Civil Disobedience and the Constitutional State 141

A. A Republican Forum for Civil Disobedience 142

B. A Political Approach to Civil Disobedience 144

C. The Broad Appeal of the Proposal 146

Ⅲ. Objections to Institutionalising Civil Disobedience 147

Ⅳ. Conclusion 150

8. The Search for a New Beginning: Hannah Arendt and Karl Jaspers as Critics of West German Parliamentarism&Kari Palonen 151

Ⅰ. Intellectuals and Parliamentarism in Post-War Germany 151

Ⅱ. Parliamentarism as Rhetorical Politics Par Excellence 152

Ⅲ. Arendt on the Aftermath of Nazi Rule 154

Ⅳ. Jaspers on the Crisis of the Federal Republic 157

Ⅴ. Jaspers's Reply to Critics 161

Ⅵ. Arendt's Review of Jaspers 164

Ⅶ. Kalyvas on Schmitt and Arendt 165

Ⅷ. Towards a Parliamentary Interpretation of 'The People' 167

PART Ⅲ: BEYOND THE NATION STATE: HANNAH ARENDT AND INTERNATIONAL LAW 171

A. Public International Law 171

9. Facing the Abyss: International Law Before the Political&Florian Hoffmann 173

Ⅰ. A Discipline of Crisis 173

Ⅱ. Out of the Mud? (Neo)formalism v (Neo)naturalism 180

Ⅲ. Facing the Abyss: Re-politicising the International 187

10. International Law and Human Plurality in the Shadow of Totalitarianism: Hannah Arendt and Raphael Lemkin&Seyla Benhabib 191

Ⅰ. Introduction 191

Ⅱ. Anti-Semitism and the Nation State in Arendt's Thought 197

Ⅲ. Arendt on Statelessness, the Minority Treaties and The 'Right to Have Rights' 200

Ⅳ. From the Origins of Totalitarianism to the Genocide Convention 203

Ⅴ. Plurality as a Fundamental Category in Arendt's Work 210

Ⅵ. Brief Epilogue: Arendt and Lemkin on Universal Jurisdiction 213

11. Power and the Rule of Law in Arendt's Thought&Hauke Brunkhorst 215

Ⅰ. Power 216

Ⅱ. Structurally Repressive Power 217

Ⅲ. Imperial Power 219

Ⅳ. Constitutionalism 221

Ⅴ. A Constitution Preserving the Constituent Power 223

Ⅵ. A Permanent Legal Revolution 225

Ⅶ. Trapped in Constitutionalism 226

Ⅷ. Democratic Inclusion 226

12. Hannah Arendt and the Languages of Global Governance&Jan Klabbers 229

Ⅰ. (Some of the) Hallmarks of Global Governance 230

Ⅱ. (Some of the) Pitfalls of Global Governance 234

Ⅲ. (Some of the) Concepts of Global Governance 238

Ⅳ. (Some of the) Human Rights in Global Governance 241

Ⅴ. (Some of the) Possible Conclusions 246

B. International Criminal Law 249

13. 'How Dangerous it Can Be to Be Innocent': War and the Law in the Thought of Hannah Arendt&Patricia Owens 251

Ⅰ. Introduction 251

Ⅱ. Politics, Law and Expansion 254

Ⅲ. Some Problems with International Theory 259

Ⅳ. Accidents and Civilian Death 266

Ⅴ. Conclusion 268

14. Hannah Arendt's Judgement of Bureaucracy&Leora Bilsky 271

Ⅰ. First Encounter: Arendt and the Eichmann Trial 272

Ⅱ. Second Encounter--Arendt and the Auschwitz-Frankfurt Trial 277

Ⅲ. The International Criminal Law of Atrocity since Nuremberg 282

Ⅳ. Private Business and the Problem of Corporate Liability 284

Ⅴ. Judging Bureaucracy: Between Spectator and Judge 287

15. Arendt in Jerusalem, Demjanjuk in Munich&Lawrence Douglas 291

Ⅰ. From Munich to Jerusalem and Back Again 291

Ⅱ. Arendt and the Idiom of Atrocity 294

Ⅲ. Demjanjuk and the Idiom of Judgment 298

Ⅳ. Ivan the Accessory 302

PART Ⅳ: THE RIGHT TO HAVE RIGHTS 305

16. Between Politics and Law: Hannah Arendt and the Subject of Rights&Charles Barbour 307

Ⅰ. Introduction 307

Ⅱ. Action and the Law 308

Ⅲ. The Performance of Rights 313

Ⅳ. Conclusion 317

17. Citizens and Persons: Legal Status and Human Rights in Hannah Arendt&James Bohman 321

Ⅰ. Introduction 321

Ⅱ. Kant, Arendt and Non-domination 324

Ⅲ. Personhood as Legal Status 329

Ⅳ. Beyond the Right to Have Rights 332

18. The Right to Have Rights: From Human Rights to Citizens' Rights and Back&Samantha Besson 335

Ⅰ. Introduction 336

Ⅱ. Human Rights: Moral and Legal 341

A. The Morality of Human Rights 341

B. The Legality of Human Rights 344

Ⅲ. Human Rights: International and Domestic 347

A. The Right to Have Rights 347

B. International and Domestic Human Rights Law 350

C. From Human Rights to Citizens' Rights and Back 352

Ⅳ. Conclusion 353

Index 357

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