Cover; Half Title; Title; Copyright; Contents; PREFACE; INTRODUCTION; CHAPTER I. PLURALISM AND LAW.; (A) Legal Theory; (1) The Relation between Legal Authority and Political Sovereignty; II. PLURALISM AND LAW-(continued); (A) Legal Theory-(continued); (2) Corporate Personality; (B) Constitutional Law; (C) International Law; III. PLURALISM AND REPRESENTATIVE GOVERNMENT: FUNCTIONAL REPRESENTATION; (A) The Electorate; (B) The Assembly; (C) The Party System; IV. ADMINISTATIVE DECENTRALIZATION; V. PLURALISM AS A SOLUTION OF THE PROBLEM OF THE RELATION BETWEEN ECONOMICS AND POLITICS.
Text of Note
(A) Political Monism: Philosophical Solutions(B) Economic Monism Socialistic Solutions; (C) Pluralism: The Guild Socialist Solution; VI. PLURALISM AS A POLITICAL THEORY; (A) The Problem of Sovereignty and the Conception of the State; CHAPTER VII. PLURALISM AS A POLITICAL THEORY-(continued); (B) The Problem of the General Will; (C) The Problem of Change and Stability in Political Organization; VIII. THE PHILOSOPHICAL BACKGROUND OF POLITICAL PLURALISM; IX. POLITICAL PLURALISM AND THE STATE AS AN ETHICAL IDEAL; X. GENERAL CONCLUSIONS; APPENDIX I.: SOME MONISTIC DEFINITIONS OF THE STATE.
Text of Note
Appendix ii.: legal pluralism in the middle agesappendix iii.: class representation in the european constitutions; appendix iv.: corporations in france and in england; bibliography.
0
8
8
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
First published in 2000. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.