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      Liberia and the Dialectic of Law
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      Book

      Liberia and the Dialectic of Law

      DOI link for Liberia and the Dialectic of Law

      Liberia and the Dialectic of Law book

      Critical Theory, Pluralism, and the Rule of Law

      Liberia and the Dialectic of Law

      DOI link for Liberia and the Dialectic of Law

      Liberia and the Dialectic of Law book

      Critical Theory, Pluralism, and the Rule of Law
      ByShane Chalmers
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2018
      eBook Published 29 May 2018
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Birkbeck Law Press
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351000277
      Pages 193
      eBook ISBN 9781351000277
      Subjects Area Studies, Humanities, Law, Politics & International Relations
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      Chalmers, S. (2018). Liberia and the Dialectic of Law: Critical Theory, Pluralism, and the Rule of Law (1st ed.). Birkbeck Law Press. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351000277

      ABSTRACT

      It is the condition of modernity that an institution cannot depend on a god, tradition, or any other transcendental source to secure its foundations, which thereby come to rest upon – or rather in, and through – its subjects. Never wholly separated from its subjects, and yet never identical with them: this contradictory condition provides a way of seeing how modern law gives form to life, and how law takes form, enlivened by its subjects. By driving Theodor Adorno’s dialectical philosophy into the concept of law, the book shows how this contradictory condition enables law to become instituted in ways that are hostile to its subjects, but also how law remains open to its subjects, and thus disposed towards transformation. To flesh out an understanding of this contradiction, the book examines the making and remaking of “Liberia”, from its conception as an idea of liberty at the beginning of the nineteenth century to its reconstruction at the beginning of the twenty-first with the assistance of an international intervention to “establish a state based on the rule of law”. In so doing, the book shows how law is at the epicentre of a colonising power in Liberia that renders subjects as mere objects; but at the same time, the book exposes the instability of this power, by showing how law is also enlivened by its subjects as it takes form in and through their lives and interactions. It is this fundamentally contradictory condition of law that ultimately denies power any absolute hold, leaving law open to the self-expression of its subjects.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |11 pages

      Introduction

      Being detained

      chapter 1|11 pages

      Negative dialectics

      chapter 2|15 pages

      The concept of law

      chapter 3|32 pages

      Civil death in the dominion of freedom

      chapter 4|31 pages

      A peace formidable to any eye

      chapter 5|20 pages

      Talking drums, talking back

      chapter 6|25 pages

      Facing the contradiction

      chapter |18 pages

      Conclusion

      Law’s rule
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