Review:
"No social thinker has written more boldly about the law in its connections with solidarity, penality, morality, and individuality than Émile Durkheim. This superb anthology of his key statements on the topic mixes and melds revolutionary social theory, sweeping historical observations, and luminous civic philosophy. It is mandatory bedside reading for any and all scholars who wish to decipher the ubiquitous and fast changing role of legal institutions and categories in the contemporary world." - Loïc Wacquant, author of Punishing the Poor and Tracking the Penal State
"Law figured prominently in Emile Durkheim's work, as an object of sociological analysis, as an index of patterns in social change, as the focus of his great debate with Gabriel Tarde, as an instance of symbolic order and a key example of the attempt to regulate society and achieve the discipline necessary for moral order. Steven Lukes and Andrew Scull do a fine job of drawing together and clearly introducing the multiple, different dimensions of Durkheim's engagement with law, whether in relation to evolution, or morality, or freedom." - Craig Calhoun, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK
"Durkheim and the Law is back! When it first appeared 30 years ago, this excellent collection instantly became essential reading on every 'sociology of law' syllabus. Now in a revised, expanded edition - with additional works by Durkheim as well as a powerful new introduction by the Editors - this indispensable volume is better than ever." - David Garland, New York University, USA
Book Description:
An improved translation of this classic text, expanded with new essays and pedagogy. Examines the place of the law in Durkheim's sociology and its centrality to his sociological theorizing
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