01848 2200253 4500001002100000005001500021008004100036020001800077035001900095041000800114082001300122084001900135100002300154245002800177250001400205260004300219300003200262500002400294504001500318520118500333650003101518650001601549650002901565INLIS00000000000766420200508204050200508||||||||| | ||| |||| ||ind|| a979-421-450-7 0010-0520007664 aind0 a340.1115 a340.1115/FRI/l0 aWolfgang Friedmann00aLaw in changing society a2 nd. Ed. aDelhibPT. Raja Grafindo Persadac2003 a580 hlm. ; 21,5 cmc21,5 cm aIndeks : p. 571-580 ap. 561-570 aLaw in changing society is a classic work on contemporary thought. Professor Friedmann writes of the law's great themes-its complex interaction with social change, its intervention into economics and the environment, its balance of public power and private rights, its place in the growth of international order, its own changing role in the interdependent society with insight, imagination and an exciting breadth of scholarship. For this second edition, the author has largely rewritten his text and added two new chapterrs: chapter 8, which examines the alternatives of economic competition, public regulation and public enterprise; and a concluding chapter, which examines the changing role of law in the society of the seventies. He sums up in his Preface the developments to which he has responded: "In some areas, such as family law, the last decade has brought fundamental changes in many countries, with respect to divorce, abortion, the status of illegitimate children, matrimonial property, and other matters. The very function and ambit of criminal law and criminal sanction has been put in question by recent developments in social psychology and genetic engineering. 0aSociological Jurisprudence 0aLaw-History 0aLaw reform-Social Change