000 nam a22 7a 4500
999 _c15146
_d15146
005 20170420132045.0
008 170420b2005 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9780198265573
040 _aMAIN
041 _aENG
082 _a342.7302
_bDWO/FRE
100 _aDworkin, Ronald
245 _aFreedom's law :
_bthe moral reading of the American Constitution
_cby Ronald Dworkin.
260 _aOxford :
_bOxford University Press,
_c2005.
300 _a427 p.
500 _aTable of Contents : Chapter 1. Introduction: The moral reading and the majoritarian premise Chapter 2. Roe in danger Chapter 3. Verdict postponed Chapter 4. What the Constitution says Chapter 5. Roe was saved Chapter 6. Do we have a right to die? Chapter 7. Gag rule and affirmative action Chapter 8. The press on trial Chapter 9. Why must speech be free? Chapter 10. Pornography and hate Chapter 11. MacKinnon's words Chapter 12. Why academic freedom? Chapter 13. Bork : the Senate's responsibility Chapter 14. What Bork's defeat meant Chapter 15. Bork's own postmortem Chapter 16. The Thomas nomination Chapter 17. Anita Hill and Clarence Thomas Chapter 18. Learned Han Chapter 19. Does Britain need a Bill of Rights?
650 _aConstitutional Law -- United States.
942 _cBK