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Anderson Matthew (ed.). Toward a Critique of Guilt: Perspectives from Law and the Humanities. JAI Press,2005. — 168 p.. 2005

This special volume of "Studies in Law, Politics, and Society" takes up a subject of an enormous import for law and legal scholarship, Guilt. At the center of our belief in law is the hope and expectation that law can differentiate the guilty from the innocent.

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PART I: (RE)THINKING LAW THROUGH LITERATUR
LAW'S GUILT ABOUT LITERATURE
Jane B. Baron
GUILTY PROFESSIONS: SPECTERS OF SAMENESS IN CAMUS'S THE FALL
Ravit Reichman1
PART II: BODIES OF GUIL
THE INJUSTICE OF INTERSEX: FEMINIST SCIENCE STUDIES AND THE WRITING OF A WRONG
Iain Morland
THE COW AND THE PLOW: ANIMAL SUFFERING HUMAN GUILT AND THE CRIME OF CRUELTY
Susan J. Pearson
‘‘NOT A STORY TO PASS ON:” SEXUAL VIOLENCE AND ETHICAL ACT IN TONI MORRISON’S BELOVED
Sara Murphy
PART III: LONGER VIEW
WAS CAIN INNOCENT? THE EARLY RABBIS INTERPRET GUILT
Chaya Halberstam
ETERNAL REMORSE
Linda Ross Meyer

Books and textbooks on the discipline Theory of law:

  1. Askey Simon, McLeod Ian. Studying Law. Macmillan Education,2014. — 239 p. - 2014 ãîä
  2. Alexy Robert. The Argument from Injustice: A Reply to Legal Positivism. Oxford University Press,2010. — 159 p. - 2010 ãîä
  3. Allan James. A Sceptical Theory of Morality and Law. Peter Lang,1998. — 277 p. - 1998 ãîä
  4. Atienza Manuel, Manero Juan Ruiz. A Theory of Legal Sentences. Springer Netherlands,1998. — 205 p. - 1998 ãîä