Foucault and Law: Towards a Sociology of Law As Governance
by Alan Hunt and Gary Wickham
Pluto Press, 1994 Cloth: 978-0-7453-0841-8 | Paper: 978-0-7453-0842-5 Library of Congress Classification K230.F682H86 1994 Dewey Decimal Classification 340.115
TOC
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
PREFACE
PART 1 Michel Foucault: An Introduction
CHAPTER ONE: AN INTRODUCTION TO FOUCAULT;
I Meeting Foucault; II Foucault's Themes and Projects; II.1 Conditions of Possibility; II.2 Discourse, Discursive Formation and Episteme; II.3 Truth and Knowledge; II.4 Knowledge and Power; II.5 Power; II.6 The Problem of State Power; II.7 Discipline; II.8 The Problem of Disciplinary Society; II.9 From Discipline to Self-Discipline: From Power to Ethics; II.10 Government and Govermentality; II.11 Strategies, Programmes, Policies and Tactics; II.12 History, Archaeology and Genealogy III Foucault and Marxism IV Conclusion: The Problem of Modernity
PART 2 Foucault and Law
CHAPTER TWO Law and Modernity;
I Introduction ; II Power and Law; III Sovereignty and Right; IV Discipline and Law; V Norms and Normalization;VI Law, Government and Governmentality; VII Foucault's Expulsion of Law; VIII The Destiny of Law
CHAPTER THREE Critique of Foucault's Expulsion of Law; I Introduction; II Foucault's Imperative Conception of Law; III Sovereignty and Rights in Monarchical and Libera States; IV Beyond the Disciplinary Society Conclusion: The Dilemma of Freedom
PART 3 Deploying Foucault for a Sociology of Law as Governance
CHAPTER FOUR Governance and its Principles;
I Introduction; II A Basic Definition of Governance; III The Four Principles of Governance; IV Conclusion
CHAPTER FIVE Law as Governance; I Introduction ; II The Four Principles of Law as Governance; III Conclusion
CHAPTER SIX Method Principles for the Sociology of Law as Governance;
I Introduction ; II The Four Method Principles of the Sociology of Law as Governance ; III Conclusion
CHAPTER SEVEN Conclusion: The Sociology of Law as Governance at Work ; I Introduction; II The Police as a Topic for the Sociology of Law as Governance
CHAPTER ONE: AN INTRODUCTION TO FOUCAULT;
I Meeting Foucault; II Foucault's Themes and Projects; II.1 Conditions of Possibility; II.2 Discourse, Discursive Formation and Episteme; II.3 Truth and Knowledge; II.4 Knowledge and Power; II.5 Power; II.6 The Problem of State Power; II.7 Discipline; II.8 The Problem of Disciplinary Society; II.9 From Discipline to Self-Discipline: From Power to Ethics; II.10 Government and Govermentality; II.11 Strategies, Programmes, Policies and Tactics; II.12 History, Archaeology and Genealogy III Foucault and Marxism IV Conclusion: The Problem of Modernity
PART 2 Foucault and Law
CHAPTER TWO Law and Modernity;
I Introduction ; II Power and Law; III Sovereignty and Right; IV Discipline and Law; V Norms and Normalization;VI Law, Government and Governmentality; VII Foucault's Expulsion of Law; VIII The Destiny of Law
CHAPTER THREE Critique of Foucault's Expulsion of Law; I Introduction; II Foucault's Imperative Conception of Law; III Sovereignty and Rights in Monarchical and Libera States; IV Beyond the Disciplinary Society Conclusion: The Dilemma of Freedom
PART 3 Deploying Foucault for a Sociology of Law as Governance
CHAPTER FOUR Governance and its Principles;
I Introduction; II A Basic Definition of Governance; III The Four Principles of Governance; IV Conclusion
CHAPTER FIVE Law as Governance; I Introduction ; II The Four Principles of Law as Governance; III Conclusion
CHAPTER SIX Method Principles for the Sociology of Law as Governance;
I Introduction ; II The Four Method Principles of the Sociology of Law as Governance ; III Conclusion
CHAPTER SEVEN Conclusion: The Sociology of Law as Governance at Work ; I Introduction; II The Police as a Topic for the Sociology of Law as Governance