Law and the Web of SocietyGeorgetown University Press, 31. juli 2001 - 272 sider From birth certificates and marriage licenses to food safety regulations and speed limits, law shapes nearly every moment of our lives. Ubiquitous and ambivalent, the law is charged with both maintaining social order and protecting individual freedom. In this book, Cynthia L. Cates and Wayne V. McIntosh explore this ambivalence and document the complex relationship between the web of law and everyday life. They consider the forms and functions of the law, charting the American legal structure and judicial process, and explaining key legal roles. They then detail how it influences the development of individual identity and human relationships at every stage of our life cycle, from conception to the grave. The authors also use the word "web" in its technological sense, providing a section at the end of each chapter that directs students to relevant and useful Internet sites. Written for upper-level undergraduate and graduate students in law and society courses, Law and the Web of Society contains original research that also makes it useful to scholars. In daring to ask difficult questions such as "When does life begin?" and "Where does law begin?" this book will stimulate thought and debate even as it presents practical answers. |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-5 av 40
... institutions . 16 And , he will complete his education only by complying with the many by - laws established by the school he attends ; if he is one of the majority of students who attends a public institution , a lot of these will have ...
... institutions , the U.S. Congress consistently ranks at the bottom ( e.g. , Asher and Barr 1994 ; Borman and Ladd 1994 ) . These perceptual differences exist pri- marily in the realm of mythology , but they are impor- tant nonetheless ...
... institutions , many of which possess lawmaking capa- bility within their respective jurisdictions , including leg- islatures , administrative agencies , and courts . Each com- munity produces an underlayer of local custom and common ...
... institutions — legislative , ad- ministrative , and judicial — involved in lawmaking . Our main focus is on activities ... institution of slavery presented an obvious chal- lenge to the Founders ' basic philosophy ( and Mans- field's ...
... institutions that govern the whole.9 All of this makes the business of understanding the role of law in our society more difficult . Laws with gov- ernment sanction apply to everyone within specified in- stitutional jurisdictions ...
Innhold
Conclusions | 102 |
Law on the Web | 103 |
Law and the Beginning of Life Birth Infancy and Childhood | 106 |
Infancy | 113 |
Law and Childhood Health | 114 |
Law and Education | 117 |
Juvenile Justice in America | 123 |
The Sundry Legal Benchmarks of Adulthood | 125 |
21 | |
26 | |
29 | |
30 | |
34 | |
Scarcely Any ProblemThe Dominion of Laws in America | 37 |
Ubiquity and Ambiguity at the Millennium | 42 |
Law on the Web | 43 |
In and Around the Web The Structures and Processes of Law | 47 |
The Criminal and Civil Processes | 56 |
Conclusion | 66 |
Denizens of the Web Lawyers Judges Juries and Interest Groups | 69 |
Judges | 73 |
Juries | 76 |
Interest Groups | 78 |
Conclusion | 81 |
Law and the Web of Life | 83 |
Introduction | 85 |
Law and Relationships | 87 |
Family v the State | 88 |
What Is a Family? | 89 |
The Decision to Dissolve a Family | 91 |
Breach of Promise to Marry | 93 |
Intrafamily Litigation | 94 |
To Procreate or Not to Procreate | 97 |
SameSex Relationships | 99 |
Abortion | 100 |
Conclusion | 126 |
Law on the Web | 127 |
Law and Identity | 129 |
Group Identity | 144 |
Conclusion | 149 |
Law on the Web | 150 |
Law and the End of Life | 152 |
Death and Dying | 155 |
Ancient Concerns of Succession | 165 |
Conclusion | 167 |
Law and Political Economy | 169 |
Community Relational Politics and the Founders Solutions | 170 |
Law and Political Economy in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries | 171 |
Advocacy | 175 |
Communication Community and Law | 177 |
Communications Technology Politics and Law | 179 |
Community Relational Distance and Political Economy | 182 |
Conclusions | 184 |
Law on the Web | 186 |
Epilogue The Dominion of Laws in America | 187 |
The Ambiguous Web | 188 |
Notes | 191 |
References | 219 |
Cases Cited | 230 |
Index | 235 |
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Law and the Web of Society Cynthia L. Cates,Wayne V. McIntosh Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2001 |