Law and Irresponsibility: On the Legitimation of Human Suffering

by Scott Veitch

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Description

Law is widely assumed to provide contemporary society with its most important means of organizing responsibility. Across a broad range of areas of social life - from the activities of states and citizens, to work, business and private relationships - it is understood that legal regulation plays a crucial role in defining and limiting responsibilities. But Law and Irresponsibility pursues the opposite view: it explores how law organizes irresponsibility. With a particular focus on large-scale show more harms - including extensive human rights violations, forms of colonialism, and environmental or nuclear devastation - this book analyzes the ways in which law legitimates human suffering by demonstrating how legal institutions operate as much to deflect responsibility for harms suffered as to acknowledge them. Drawing on a series of case studies, it shows not only how law facilitates the dispersal and disavowal of responsibility, but how it does so in consistent and patterned ways. Irresponsibility is organized, and its organization is traced here to the legal forms, and the social and political conditions, that sustain 'our' complicity in human suffering. This innovative and interdisciplinary book provides a radical challenge to conventional thinking about law and legal institutions. It will be of considerable interest to those working in law, political and legal theory, sociology and moral philosophy. nbsp; show less

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Author Information

6 Works 28 Members
Scott Veitch is Reader in Law at the University of Glasgow

Classifications

Genres
Politics and Government, Nonfiction, Philosophy
DDC/MDS
340.112Social sciencesLawLawTheoryParticular TopicsEthics; Natural Law
LCC
K247.6 .V45LawJurisprudence. Philosophy and theory of lawThe concept of law
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Members
6
Popularity
3,028,943
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
3