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Socrate, les lois et les Lois
In: Revue française d'histoire des idées politiques, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 259-273
ISSN: 2119-3851
Résumé La première partie propose des modifications à certaines interprétations classiques de Platon, spécialement à celle qui divise les dialogues en « primitifs » ou « socratiques », « intermédiaires » et « tardifs » (donc, par conséquent, « non socratiques »). Même dans les Lois , le tout dernier dialogue, Platon paraît écrire comme s'il se pensait encore lui-même comme socratique. La seconde et principale partie explore ce conflit apparent entre la propre auto-évaluation du Platon tardif et la perspective moderne classique sur ce même Platon tardif.
Socrate, les lois et les Lois
In: Revue française d'histoire des idées politiques: revue semestrielle, Heft 16, S. 259-274
ISSN: 1266-7862
L'intelligibilité des lois
In: Pouvoirs: revue française d'études constitutionelles et politiques, Band 114, Heft 3, S. 131-137
Résumé L'intelligibilité des lois est une utopie et un éternel retour. Elle est aujourd'hui exigée par le Conseil constitutionnel et la Cour européenne des droits de l'homme. Elle est difficilement accessible parce qu'elle suppose une humilité rare chez les juristes.
« Au regard des lois », le regard hors les lois
In: Communications, Band 75, Heft 1, S. 111-134
ISSN: 2102-5924
Dans les sociétés démocratiques contemporaines, le discours du droit ne traite pas du regard. Lois et règlements esquivent la puissance des échanges de regards. Or, quand agressions verbales et attaques physiques, tourments psychiques et infortunes matérielles, conflits sociaux et litiges interpersonnels se forment à partir d'un regard décoché par l'un et capté par l'autre, comment se méprendre sur la force et l'intensité du regard ? La qualité et la signification du regard sont indéfinissables en droit. Le droit retient l'acte et oublie le regard.
L'intelligibilité des lois
In: Pouvoirs: revue française d'études constitutionnelles et politiques, Heft 114, S. 131-138
ISSN: 0152-0768
World Affairs Online
La distinction lois politiques - lois civiles (1748 - 1804)
In: Collection d'histoire des idées et des institutions politiques 38
Reckitt, Lois Galgay
Lois Galgay Reckitt grew up in Massachusetts, and moved to South Portland, ME, where her husband was stationed in the Coast Guard. After they divorced, she came out as a lesbian. She served as the state coordinator of the National Organization for Women (NOW) for Bath, ME; she was also the founder of Maine NOW and Maine Right to Choose, which focused on female reproductive rights. In 1976, she helped develop the coalition that put forward the first gay rights bill in Maine. She went on to become the vice president of NOW, which took her to Washington, D.C, where she worked from 1984-1988. She later served on the board of the Human Rights Campaign Fund. In 1979, she began working with Family Crisis Services on issues related to domestic violence. She has also served as adjunct faculty in biology at the University of Southern Maine. In recognition of her work as an activist, Reckitt was inducted into the Maine Women's Hall of Fame. She currently represents South Portland in the Maine Legislature. ; https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/usmlgoh/1003/thumbnail.jpg
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L'inscription territoriale des lois
In: Esprit, Band Novembre, Heft 11, S. 151-170
Le mouvement de globalisation économique s'accompagne d'un processus de déterritorialisation des lois. Mais l'indifférenciation des lieux n'apparaît pas plus viable que l'ancien système strictement interétatique. Il faudra pourtant retrouver le sens de la mesure et des limites pour rester dans un monde vivable.
Lois Galgay Reckitt
Lois Galgay Reckitt was born and raised in Massachusetts. She attended Brandeis University and then Boston University for her graduate degree. After college, she married a man who was in the Coast Guard. They moved to South Portland to the house she still lives in today. She came out at age 33 when she was deeply entrenched in the growing women's movement. She had a rocky divorce with her self-proclaimed feminist husband who blackmailed her when he found out she was a lesbian. In 1971 she became the treasurer for the first National Organization for Women (NOW) chapter in Maine. In the 80s she worked for the National Organization for Women in Washington, DC. She was one of the founding board members of the Human Rights Campaign Fund, and in that role helped to push for federal money for AIDS research, and to create National Coming Out Day. She worked as executive director at Family Crisis Services in Portland for 37 years helping people in domestic violence situations. Now a member of the Maine State Legislature, she works to pass bills that address issues such as human trafficking, gay conversion therapy, and gay rights. Lois has been married to her wife, Lynn, for 15 years. Citation Please cite as: Querying the Past: LGBTQ Maine Oral History Project Collection, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer+ Collection, Jean Byers Sampson Center for Diversity in Maine, University of Southern Maine Libraries. For more information about the Querying the Past: Maine LGBTQ Oral History Project, please contact Dr. Wendy Chapkis. ; https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/querying_ohproject/1065/thumbnail.jpg
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