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Genre/Form: | Electronic books |
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Additional Physical Format: | Print version: Pateman, Carole. Contract and Domination. Oxford : Wiley, ©2013 (OCoLC)85690535 |
Material Type: | Document, Internet resource |
Document Type: | Internet Resource, Computer File |
All Authors / Contributors: |
Carole Pateman; Charles W Mills |
ISBN: | 9780745636214 0745636217 9780745640037 0745640036 |
OCLC Number: | 843202341 |
Description: | 1 online resource (ix, 306 pages) |
Contents: | Introduction / Carole Pateman, Charles W. Mills -- Contract and social change / A dialogue between Carole Pateman and Charles W. Mills -- The settler contract / Carole Pateman -- The domination contract / Charles W. Mills -- Contract of breach: repairing the racial contract / Charles W. Mills -- Race, sex, and indifference / Carole Pateman -- Intersecting contracts / Charles W. Mills -- On critics and contract / Carole Pateman -- Reply to critics / Charles W. Mills. |
Responsibility: | Carole Pateman and Charles W. Mills. |
Abstract:
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
"An extraordinarily helpful and enlightening work for both non-contract and contract theorists alike, and for everyone concerned with racial, gender and class inequality." Political Studies Review "Charles Mills and Carole Pateman are two exemplary philosophers of freedom. This book is a grand contribution to our understanding of justice. Don't miss it!" Cornel West, Princeton University "A provocative book that hopefully will generate intense debate and discussion." Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society "Engaging and often thought-provoking ... [Contract and Domination] raises good questions and portends more research into the continued viability of contracts as a basis for thinking about law." Law and Politics Book Review "This is the most sustained intersectional analysis of race and gender to date, providing a theoretical account of how these categories connect, overlap, mediate one another, and comparatively structure oppression. It is also a debate in political philosophy over the utility of the contract model for conceptualizing a more just society. The disagreements between the authors will make this book especially fruitful for classroom use." Lind Martin Alcoff, Syracuse University Read more...

