Social Cohesion and Legal Coercion: A Critique of Weber, Durkheim, and Marx

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Rodopi, 1997 - 402 pages
The book is a critical analysis of the work of Max Weber, Emile Durkheim and Karl Marx. It focuses on their separate analyses of the role of law in society, pointing out their faults and errors, and the resultant impact on modern social science. The author takes issue with Weber's work on rationality, with Durkheim's work on repressive and restitutive law, and with Marx's work on social justice and law as part of the super-structure. In each section of the book he shows the implications that flow from a re-assessment and re-interpretation of their work for an understanding of society. The book is multi-disciplinary, making ample reference to law, sociology, anthropology, history, religion, ecology, criminology, philosophy and economics. Its various chapters discuss a wide range of themes, including rationality, tradition, science, political authority, conflict resolution, community, justice and altruism.

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Contents

Chapter
1
Chapter
11
Chapter Three
35
Chapter Four
55
Chapter Five
83
Chapter
109
Chapter Seven
129
Chapter Eight
153
ON RADICALISM AND IDEOLOGY
227
ON LIBERTY AND EQUALITY
251
ON WEALTH AND ALTRUISM
279
Chapter Fourteen
309
AFTERWORD by Virginia Black
319
NOTES
335
BIBLIOGRAPHY
377
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
393

Chapter Nine
177
Chapter
207
SUBJECT INDEX
399
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