- Home
- Making Law
Preparing your PDF for download...
There was a problem with your download, please contact the server administrator.
Making Law
The State, the Law, and Structural Contradictions
Edited by William J. Chambliss and Marjorie S. Zatz
Published by: Indiana University Press
464 Pages
Other Retailers:
" . . . a distinct, broad, but compelling framework for examining a variety of laws and social policies." —Legal Studies Forum
" . . . a very rich volume that has something to offer to many different tastes . . . an excellent companion to the main textbook in a large undergraduate law-and-society course." —Contemporary Sociology
No issue has captured the imagination of social scientists and legal scholars more consistently than the creation of laws. The political implications of the study of law and society often create ideological diatribes with little attention to empirical detail. In this book, legal scholars, sociologists, political scientists, and anthropologists join in an attempt to develop and refine a structural theory of law.
Preface: Marjorie S. Zatz
Acknowledgments
PART I. Structural Contradictions
1. On Lawmaking
William J. Chambliss
2. The Creation of Criminal Law and Crime Control
William J. Chambliss
3. The Political Economy of Opium and Heroin
William J. Chambliss
4. The Contradictions of Corrections: An Inquiry into Nest Dilemmas
Raymond J. Michalowski
5. Anti-Democratic Legislation in the Service of Democracy: Anti-Racism in Isreal
Ephraim Tabory
PART II. Ideology
6. Structural Contradictions and Ideological Consistency: Changes in the Form and Content of Cuban Criminal Law
Marjorie S. Zatz and James H. McDonald
7. Worker Safety, Law, and Social Change: The Italian Case
Kitty Calavita
8. Understanding the Emrgence of Law and Public Policy: Toward a Relational Model of the State
Nancy A. Wonders and Frederic I. Solop
PART III. Conflicts and Dilemmas
9. The Contradictions of Immigration Lawmaking: The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986
Kitty Calavita
10. Toward a Class-Dialectical Model of Power: An Empirical Assessment of Three Competing Models of Political Power
J. Allen Whitt
11. State-Organized Crime
William J. Chambliss
12. State-Organized Homicide: A study of Seven CIP Plans to Assassinate Fidel Castro
Mark S. Hamm
PART IV. Strategies and Triggering Events
13. Social Structure, Crime, and Politics: A Conflict Model of the Criminal Law Formation Process
Edmund F. Mcarrell and Thomas C. Catellano
14. Other People's Money Revisited: Collective Embezzlement in the Savings and Loan and Insurance Industries
15. Structural Contradictions and th production of New Legal Institutions: The Transformation of Industrial Accident Law Revisited
Ryken Grattet
PART V. Conclusions
16. Future Diretions
Marjorie S. Zatz and William J. Chambliss
Contributors
Index
WILLIAM J. CHAMBLISS is Professor of Sociology at George Washington University and author of On the Take: From Petty Crooks to Presidents; Law, Order and Power (with Robert Seidman); Organizing Crime (with Alan Block); Exploring Criminology; and more than a dozen other books in the sociology of law, sociological theory, and criminology. MARJORIE S. ZATZ is Associate Professor of Justice Studies at Arizona State University and author of Robes and Sandals: Producing Legality in Revolutionary Cuba.