01940 2200265 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001800097082001000115084001600125100001800141245004400159250001000203260005100213300003100264500002400295504001500319520125200334650000801586650001301594650001901607990002401626990002401650INLIS00000000000023520221028025838 a0010-0520000235221028 | |  a9780691126739 a340.1 a340.1 TYL w0 aTyler, Tom R.1 aWhy People Obey the Law /cTom R. Tyler aCet.1 aPrinceton :bPrinceton University Press,c2006 avii, 299p.; 25 cm ;c25 cm aIndeks : p. 295-299 ap. 288-294 aThe first goal of this book is to contrast the instrumental and normative perspective on why people follow the law. The instrumental perspective on the citizen underlies what is known as the deterrence literature: people are viewed as shaping their behavior to respond to changes in the tangible, immidiateincentives and penalties associated with following the law - to judgments about the personals gains and losses resulting from different kinds of behavior. The second goal of this book is to explore how people react to their personal experience with legal authorities. Of particular importance is the impact of these experience on views of the legitimacy of legal authorities, because legitimacy in the eyes of the public is a key precondition to the effectiveness of athorities. Changes in legitimacy will affect the degree to which people comply with laws in their everyday lives. And the final goal of this book is to explore the meaning of procedural justice by cntrasting the normative and instrumental approaches. The instrumental view of procedural justice contained in the control theory of Thibaut and Walker (1975, 1978) suggests that people do not focus directly on the favorability of the outcomes they receive from third parties. 4aLaw 4aPhilospy 4aPublic Opinion a05975/MKRI-P/X-2008 a05975/MKRI-P/X-2008