Introduction; 1. Nietzsche’s Echo; PART ONE: Classical Understandings; 2. Injustice as the Negation of Justice; 3.Injustice as Disunity; 4. Injustice as Mismeasurement; PART TWO: Post-Classical Understandings; 5.Injustice as Unity; 6. Injustice as Measurement; 7. Measurement and Modernity; Works Cited.
Eric Heinze is Ptofessor of Law at Queen Mary, London
"As Professor of Law and Humanities at Queen Mary College,
University of London, Heinz argues in this thought provoking
treatise that, contrary to the traditional tenets of Western
justice theory, injustice is not primarily the negation, failure or
absence of justice. Rather it is ‘the constant product of regimes
and norms of justice’. Furthermore, justice is not always the cure
for injustice, but often its cause." - Phillip Taylor MBE and
Elizabeth Taylor of Richmond Green Chambers
"As Professor of Law and Humanities at Queen Mary College,
University of London, Heinze argues in this thought provoking
treatise that, contrary to the traditional tenets of Western
justice theory, injustice is not primarily the negation, failure or
absence of justice. Rather it is ‘the constant product of regimes
and norms of justice’. Furthermore, justice is not always the cure
for injustice, but often its cause." - Phillip Taylor MBE and
Elizabeth Taylor of Richmond Green Chambers"The scholarship is
breathtaking, but don’t be deterred or overawed by Heinze’s
stunning erudition . . . something of magnitude is afoot." Adrian
Howe, Legal Studies, Vol. 34 No. 4 (2014)."The Concept of Injustice
makes a thought-provoking contribution to debates about justice.
Given that these debates are well-trodden ground within Western
thought, Heinze is to be commended for such an original and
engaging contribution." Ball, Matthew J. Griffith Law Review, Vol.
22, No. 2 (2013).
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