The author is Professor of Legal and Political Philosophy in the University of Cambridge.
Whenever there is a legal rule, the question arises: what makes the legal rule different...
By Prof. Amartya Sen (winner of Nobel Prize for ...
2009
This major philosophical work, by one of the world`s leading public intellectuals, constructs a new theory of justice, not from abstract ideals or notions of what perfect institutions and rules might...
"During the last years of its life the Soviet Union turned to law like a dying monarch to his withered God. Its successor, the Russian Federation, has adopted the same posture. In public discourse the phrases "civil...
The present title is the second in a three-volume set addressed to the general theme of `The Soviet Union and International Cooperation in Legal Matters.' This project will concentrate essentially on the post-World War...
The present title is the last in a three-volume set addressing the umbrella theme of `The Soviet Union and International Cooperation in Legal Matters'. The preceding installments treated the Soviet Union's record in the...
This is the first treatise on Russia's new legal system, as it emerged from the dissolution of the Soviet Union. The first part of the book analyses in detail the political and economic origins of perestroika,...