Detail Katalog

ID: 4356
Cover Myth of Moral Justice :  Why Our Legal System Fails to Do What's Right / Thane Rosenbaum

Myth of Moral Justice : Why Our Legal System Fails to Do What's Right / Thane Rosenbaum

Edisi: 1

Pengarang:
Rosenbaum, Thane
Penerbit:
HarperCollins Publishing,
Tempat Terbit:
New York :
Tahun Terbit:
2004
Bahasa:
eng
Subjek
1. Justice, Administration of - united states -- 2. Justice, Administration of- in literature -- 3. Justice , Administration of - in molion pictures
Deskripsi Fisik:
313 p. ; 24 cm
ISBN:
0-06-018816-2
Nomor Panggil:
340.112 ROS m
Control Number:
INLIS000000000004356
BIB ID:
0010-0520004356
Catatan
Indeks : Indeks ; American culture is obsessed with the law, the legal system, and lawyers. Much in our everyday lives revolves around the law, and we are bombarded daily by cultural images of lawyers and the legal system at work. We indulge in dramatic television shows and feature films about lawyers, we read legal thrillers, and observe trials as they unfold. Many of us wish for our children to attend law school and become lawyers. At the same time, most people report that they don't trust lawyers and hold them and the legal system in very low esteem. Those who have had unfavorable experiences with the law have walked away bitter and resentful. Some have observed that lawyers operate according to their own professional worldview, one that is emotionally detached and unfeeling, overly logical, technical, narrow, bureaucratic, and insensitive to basic human emotions and moral principles. We are, paradoxically, both fascinated and repulsed by our legal system. The dramatic allure of judgment keeps us enthralled; the absence of moral conviction in the law makes us furious. In The Myth of Moral Justice, law professor and novelist Thane Rosenbaum suggests that this paradox stems from the fact that citizens and the courts are at odds when it comes to their definitions of justice. Individuals seek out lawyers and enter courtrooms because they have an emotional grievance as well as a legal complaint. They expect the law to do the right thing. Yet our legal system, bent on separating the legal from the emotional, willfully ignores basic moral criteria. As a result, the justice system undermines truth, perpetuates secrets and lies, prevents victims from telling their stories, promotes adversarial enmity over community repair, and fails to equate legal duty with moral responsibility. Legal outcomes that make sense to lawyers and judges feel simply wrong to most people and enrage others. With a lawyer's expertise and a novelist's sensibility, Rosenbaum tackles complicated philosophical questions about our longing for moral justice. He also takes a critical look at what our legal system does to the spirits of those who must come before the law, along with those who practice within it. Rosenbaum reinforces his themes with artistic representations of lawyers and legal systems from the classic works of Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, and Franz Kafka, along with various important feature films that illuminate why our legal system fails to do what's right.
Status
Tersedia di OPAC Bibliografi Nasional Indonesia Karya Tulis Ilmiah Nasional
Informasi Eksemplar & Metadata
Nomor Barcode Nomor Panggil Akses Lokasi Ketersediaan
00000002194 340.112 ROS m Dapat dipinjam Mahkamah Konstitusi RI Tersedia
00000002181 340.112/ROS/T Dapat dipinjam Mahkamah Konstitusi RI Tersedia
00000002171 340.112 ROS m Dapat dipinjam Mahkamah Konstitusi RI Tersedia
Format MARC21 - Total 26 field
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020 # # $a 0-06-018816-2 5
041 _ _ $a eng 6
082 # # $a 340.112 7
084 # # $a 340.112 ROS m 8
100 _ # $a Rosenbaum, Thane 9
245 1 4 $a Myth of Moral Justice : $b Why Our Legal System Fails to Do What's Right /$c Thane Rosenbaum 10
260 # # $a New York :$b HarperCollins Publishing,$c 2004 11
300 # # $a 313 p. ; $c 24 cm 12
500 # # $a Indeks : Indeks 13
520 # # $a American culture is obsessed with the law, the legal system, and lawyers. Much in our everyday lives revolves around the law, and we are bombarded daily by cultural images of lawyers and the legal system at work. We indulge in dramatic television shows and feature films about lawyers, we read legal thrillers, and observe trials as they unfold. Many of us wish for our children to attend law school and become lawyers. At the same time, most people report that they don't trust lawyers and hold them and the legal system in very low esteem. Those who have had unfavorable experiences with the law have walked away bitter and resentful. Some have observed that lawyers operate according to their own professional worldview, one that is emotionally detached and unfeeling, overly logical, technical, narrow, bureaucratic, and insensitive to basic human emotions and moral principles. We are, paradoxically, both fascinated and repulsed by our legal system. The dramatic allure of judgment keeps us enthralled; the absence of moral conviction in the law makes us furious. In The Myth of Moral Justice, law professor and novelist Thane Rosenbaum suggests that this paradox stems from the fact that citizens and the courts are at odds when it comes to their definitions of justice. Individuals seek out lawyers and enter courtrooms because they have an emotional grievance as well as a legal complaint. They expect the law to do the right thing. Yet our legal system, bent on separating the legal from the emotional, willfully ignores basic moral criteria. As a result, the justice system undermines truth, perpetuates secrets and lies, prevents victims from telling their stories, promotes adversarial enmity over community repair, and fails to equate legal duty with moral responsibility. Legal outcomes that make sense to lawyers and judges feel simply wrong to most people and enrage others. With a lawyer's expertise and a novelist's sensibility, Rosenbaum tackles complicated philosophical questions about our longing for moral justice. He also takes a critical look at what our legal system does to the spirits of those who must come before the law, along with those who practice within it. Rosenbaum reinforces his themes with artistic representations of lawyers and legal systems from the classic works of Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, and Franz Kafka, along with various important feature films that illuminate why our legal system fails to do what's right. 14
650 _ 4 $a 1. Justice, Administration of - united states 15
650 _ 4 $a 2. Justice, Administration of- in literature 16
650 _ 4 $a 3. Justice , Administration of - in molion pictures 17
990 # # $a 02194/MKRI-P/III-2005 18
990 # # $a 02181/MKRI-P/III-2005 19
990 # # $a 02171/MKRI-P/III-2005 20
990 # # $a 02171/MKRI-P/III-2005 21
990 # # $a 02194/MKRI-P/III-2005 22
990 # # $a 02181/MKRI-P/III-2005 23
990 # # $a 02194/MKRI-P/III-2005 24
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Penjelasan Field MARC21:
  • 001: Control Number
  • 005: Date and Time of Latest Transaction
  • 020: ISBN
  • 100: Main Entry - Personal Name
  • 245: Title Statement
  • 250: Edition Statement
  • 260: Publication Information
  • 300: Physical Description
  • 650: Subject
  • 700: Added Entry - Personal Name
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Ditambahkan: 21 Jan 2008
Disetujui OPAC: 08 May 2020
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