Semiotics and legislation: jurisprudential, institutional and sociological perspectives
In: Legal semiotics monographs 10
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In: Legal semiotics monographs 10
In: Sociology for a new century
In: Fundamental issues in law and society research v. 4
In: Studies in contemporary German social thought
In: Problems of post-communism, Band 45, S. 48-57
ISSN: 1075-8216
Examines impact of changing social and economic structures on theories of justice. Marxists, Deng Xiaoping thought, rights, obligations, and interests, law and politics, efficiency and fairness, and "socio-rights".
In: Publications des Facultés Universitaires Saint-Louis
In: 1, Collection générale 83
In Buchanan v. Warley the Supreme Court found that a Louisville, Kentucky, residential segregation ordinance was unconstitutional because it interfered with the Fourteenth Amendment right to own and dispose of property and could not be justified as a police power measure.' The Buchanan decision came at a crucial juncture in the history of American race relations. Several cities in the southern and border states had recently passed residential segregation ordinances, and other cities were poised to follow suit if the Supreme Court ruled that such ordinances were constitutional. Several northern cities were considering adopting residential segregation laws as well,' and there was considerable agitation in the rural South for de jure segregation. The spread of residential segregation laws reflected the antipathy the average white American felt toward African-Americans. Most whites, including most white intellectuals, believed that African- Americans were culturally and biologically inferior. Progressive political and intellectual leaders generally shared the racism of the day, and Progressive social scientists promoted pseudo-scientific theories of race differences. Not surprisingly, the idea of coerced segregation resonated with Progressive reformers, who, consistent with their statist outlook, believed in "public control" of the housing market. Some Progressives insisted that capitalism forced unwilling races to live together. Others justified segregation laws as furthering the "public interest" by preventing miscegenation between "superior" whites and "inferior" African-Americans." Progressives argued that segregation laws promoted public safety, protected property values, and helped maintain the public order. National political leaders supported segregation laws as well.
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In: Suhrkamp-Taschenbuch Wissenschaft 1418
In: Oxford socio-legal studies
In: Droit, éthique, société