01557 2200229 4500001002100000005001500021008004100036020001800077035001900095041000800114082001000122084001600132100001700148245003800165260004200203300003300245504002800278520096500306650001501271650002201286650001901308INLIS00000000000187420200508201638200508||||||||| | ||| |||| ||eng|| a81-7534-374-5 0010-0520001874 aeng0 a340.1 a340.1/STO/H0 aJulius Stone00aHuman Law and Human Justice 07673 aNew DelhibUniversal Publishingc2004 axxxiii, 414 p.; 24cm.c24cm. aBibliography p. 360-380 aThis is the second of three works in wich we have sought to survey critically the contemporary problems within the field of jurisprudence. Its purpose is to take stock of that component of legal ordering to which men refer when they speak of justice, good order, or its equivalents. Its seeks to do this against a background of the changing social context within which men?s ideas and stances with regard to justice have from time to time arisen, found expression or realized themselves (more or less) in social action. We here attempt, in short, with main emphasis on modern developed societies, to give an analytical, historical and critical account of the growth of human ideals of justice as they bear on human legals ordering, and in their relation to the legal, social and economic contexts in wich they have arisen. And not the least important aspect of this is to try and assess the contemporary overall position as to our apprehension of these ideals. 0a1. Justice 0a2. Law-philosophy 0a3. Natural law