Mary Ann Glendon has written a powerful and persuasive diagnosis of the ills besetting modern American society. Unlike many other commentators, Glendon refuses to lay the blame on any single group or institution but spreads her accusations widely across society. For that reason, this book is sure to displease ideologues and fellow travelers on both the left and the right, but it is her impartial and relatively apolitical stance that gives the book its major strengths
Modern American rights claims spring from a wide array of historical, legal, and metaphysical source...
Mary Ann Glendon is an accomplished legal scholar whose books and essays in the field of marriage an...
This is a transcript of a dialogue between Lisa Downing and Maggie Nelson about Nelson’s recent book...
A Review of Rights Talk: The Impoverishment of Political Discourse by Mary Ann Glendo
Professor Janet Ainsworth reviews Rights Talk: The Impoverishment of Political Discourse, by Mary An...
In these two lively, elegant, and lucid books, Mary Ann Glendon points to an increasing bloody-minde...
In recent years, a growing recognition of the power of rights talk in American law and life has sur...
Mary Ann Glendon maintains that the United States has created too many legal rights in the last two ...
There is a well-known critique of human rights talk in America, often named “the communitarian criti...
M. A. Glendon, Rights TalK. The Impoverishment of Political Discourse. In: Revue internationale de d...
Rights are a sacred part of American identity, yet they are the source of some of our greatest divis...
A review of Legal Rights: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives edited by Austin Sarat and Thoma...
You have the right to remain silent – and the right to free speech. The right to worship, and to dou...
Reviewing George I. Lovell, This is Not Civil Rights: Discovering Rights Talk in 1939 America (2012)...
The author responds to the three jurisprudential positions that Ronald Dworkin discusses in his boo...
Modern American rights claims spring from a wide array of historical, legal, and metaphysical source...
Mary Ann Glendon is an accomplished legal scholar whose books and essays in the field of marriage an...
This is a transcript of a dialogue between Lisa Downing and Maggie Nelson about Nelson’s recent book...
A Review of Rights Talk: The Impoverishment of Political Discourse by Mary Ann Glendo
Professor Janet Ainsworth reviews Rights Talk: The Impoverishment of Political Discourse, by Mary An...
In these two lively, elegant, and lucid books, Mary Ann Glendon points to an increasing bloody-minde...
In recent years, a growing recognition of the power of rights talk in American law and life has sur...
Mary Ann Glendon maintains that the United States has created too many legal rights in the last two ...
There is a well-known critique of human rights talk in America, often named “the communitarian criti...
M. A. Glendon, Rights TalK. The Impoverishment of Political Discourse. In: Revue internationale de d...
Rights are a sacred part of American identity, yet they are the source of some of our greatest divis...
A review of Legal Rights: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives edited by Austin Sarat and Thoma...
You have the right to remain silent – and the right to free speech. The right to worship, and to dou...
Reviewing George I. Lovell, This is Not Civil Rights: Discovering Rights Talk in 1939 America (2012)...
The author responds to the three jurisprudential positions that Ronald Dworkin discusses in his boo...
Modern American rights claims spring from a wide array of historical, legal, and metaphysical source...
Mary Ann Glendon is an accomplished legal scholar whose books and essays in the field of marriage an...
This is a transcript of a dialogue between Lisa Downing and Maggie Nelson about Nelson’s recent book...