Combining legal and philosophical analysis, Reciprocal Freedom offers a sequenced and legally informed argument for understanding law as necessary to our existence as free beings. Exploring the relationship between private law and the state, this book covers conceptions of corrective justice, rights, ownership, and the role of legal institutions.
Combining legal and philosophical analysis, Reciprocal Freedom offers a sequenced and legally informed argument for understanding law as necessary to our existence as free beings. Exploring the relationship between private law and the state, this book covers conceptions of corrective justice, rights, ownership, and the role of legal institutions.
Ernest J. Weinrib has a PhD from Harvard (1968) and a BA (1965) and a JD (1972) from the University of Toronto. He taught law at the University of Toronto from 1972 to 2021, and he has been a visiting professor at the Yale Law School and at Tel Aviv University. He held the rank of University Professor (the University of Toronto's highest honour) and was the Cecil A. Wright Professor of Law.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface 1: Structure 2: Rights 3: Ownership 4: Public Right 5: Distributive Justice 6: Horizontality: Presuppositions and Functions 7: Horizontality: Scope and Operation 8: The Rule of Law
Preface 1: Structure 2: Rights 3: Ownership 4: Public Right 5: Distributive Justice 6: Horizontality: Presuppositions and Functions 7: Horizontality: Scope and Operation 8: The Rule of Law
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