Justice Accused: Antislavery and the Judicial ProcessYale University Press, 1975 M01 1 - 322 páginas What should a judge do when he must hand down a ruling based on a law that he considers unjust or oppressive? This question is examined through a series of problems concerning unjust law that arose with respect to slavery in nineteenth-century America.
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Contenido
Of Creon and Captain Vere | 1 |
and Judicial Positivism in the Eighteenth Century | 8 |
NATURE TAMED | 31 |
In Favorem Libertatis? | 62 |
Conflict of Laws | 83 |
Perspectives from International | 100 |
NATURES PLACE DISPUTED | 117 |
1 | 129 |
33333 | 172 |
The Fugitive Slave Law | 175 |
Postscript to Part II | 192 |
Context for Conscience | 201 |
Judicial Responses | 226 |
55 | 241 |
62 | 254 |
79 | 275 |
Formal Assumptions of the Judiciary | 131 |
Formal Assumptions of the Antislavery Forces | 149 |
8 | 154 |
The Fugitive Slave Law to 1850 | 159 |
2228 | 165 |
87 | 284 |
93 | 291 |
316 | |