Emmanuel Levinas's philosophy of ethics has frequently attracted attention amongst legal scholars, but he remains a divisive and often enigmatic contributor to this field. He has been read within contexts as varied as human rights, private law, refugee law, and on the nature of judicial reasoning. This book explores what might unite such apparently diverse applications of his ideas, and in doing so considers the challenge of law's ethical relationship with the other. In addition to asking how Levinas's ethics can inform legal problems, the book also examines the ways in which the modern legal edifice has a deceptive tendency to close itself off from the ethical experience. In particular, literatures on biopolitics suggest that law is increa...
Levinas’s ethics has not been able to address the plethora of human challenges arising from the ethi...
What can we say, in good faith, about the moral status of animals? This article explores the above q...
The destruction of man in the Shoah or Holocaust did not mean that Levinas argues in favor of turnin...
This work explores the relationship between the ethical aspect of the philosophy of Emannuel Levinas...
This article engages with Desmond Manderson's recent book, Proximity, Levinas and the Soul of Law (2...
This article engages with Desmond Manderson's recent book, Proximity, Levinas and the Soul of Law (2...
Jurisprudential debates on the place of law within the concept of anarchy are limited. Welack thorou...
Emmanuel Levinas is of Jewish origin; born in Lithuania, he has lived, for his Jewish condition, the...
The question of the appropriate relationship between Law and Gospel in Lutheran Tradition evokes the...
This dissertation investigates the possibility of developing a practical ethics from the work of the...
A common way in which to apply Emmanuel Levinas? philosophy to legal and political theory is through...
This article situates the texts in which Emmanuel Levinas directly addresses questions of animality ...
At a time when the practice of medicine is subject to technical and biopolitical imperatives that gi...
This dissertation examines the contributions of Martin Heidegger and Emmanuel Levinas to an understa...
The destruction of man in the Shoah or Holocaust did not mean that Levinas argues in favor of turnin...
Levinas’s ethics has not been able to address the plethora of human challenges arising from the ethi...
What can we say, in good faith, about the moral status of animals? This article explores the above q...
The destruction of man in the Shoah or Holocaust did not mean that Levinas argues in favor of turnin...
This work explores the relationship between the ethical aspect of the philosophy of Emannuel Levinas...
This article engages with Desmond Manderson's recent book, Proximity, Levinas and the Soul of Law (2...
This article engages with Desmond Manderson's recent book, Proximity, Levinas and the Soul of Law (2...
Jurisprudential debates on the place of law within the concept of anarchy are limited. Welack thorou...
Emmanuel Levinas is of Jewish origin; born in Lithuania, he has lived, for his Jewish condition, the...
The question of the appropriate relationship between Law and Gospel in Lutheran Tradition evokes the...
This dissertation investigates the possibility of developing a practical ethics from the work of the...
A common way in which to apply Emmanuel Levinas? philosophy to legal and political theory is through...
This article situates the texts in which Emmanuel Levinas directly addresses questions of animality ...
At a time when the practice of medicine is subject to technical and biopolitical imperatives that gi...
This dissertation examines the contributions of Martin Heidegger and Emmanuel Levinas to an understa...
The destruction of man in the Shoah or Holocaust did not mean that Levinas argues in favor of turnin...
Levinas’s ethics has not been able to address the plethora of human challenges arising from the ethi...
What can we say, in good faith, about the moral status of animals? This article explores the above q...
The destruction of man in the Shoah or Holocaust did not mean that Levinas argues in favor of turnin...