内容简介
Editors’ Introduction
1 On the Necessarily Public Character of Law&Neil Walker
PART Ⅰ CONSTITUTED PUBLICS
2 Rediscovering ‘The Public’: The Curious Case of Benjamin Constant&Christopher McCorkindale
3 Democracy, Political Parties and the Will of the People&Andrew Maloney
4 Between Contract and Constitution: International Organizations and the Protection of Global Public Interests&Richard Collins
PART Ⅱ UNCONSTITUTED PUBLICS
5 ‘Unconstituted Publics’?&Scott Veitch
6 A Dilemma for the Civil Disobedient: Pleading ‘Guilty’ or ‘Not Guilty’ in the Court Room?&Piero Moraro
7 Justifying Civil Disobedience With Reference to EU Public Consensus&Haris Psarras
PART Ⅲ EXCLUDED PUBLICS
8 Excluded Publics - Included Privates: The Janus Headed Nature of the Liberal Public-Private Divide&Daniel Augenstein
9 The Prisoner’s Right to Vote: The Creation of an Abnormal and Excluded Public&Vanessa De Greef
10 Subjects to Citizens: ‘Native’ Enfranchisement in Reconstituting the Imperial Public of the British Empire, c.1887-1914&Coel Kirkby
PART Ⅳ PUBLIC/PRIVATE
11 The Public/Private Dichotomy and the Unity of Capitalist (Re-)production&Gregor Clunie
12 The Public Nature of Private Law?&Claudio Michelon
13 Between the Public and the Private: Banking Law in 1830s England&Iain Frame
14 The Public-ness of Development in the World Trade Organization&Stephanie Switzer
PART Ⅴ EMERGING PUBLICS: THE ROLE OF THE VICTIM IN INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE
15 The Impact of the Distinction Between Situations and Cases on the Participation of Victims in the International Criminal Court&Ania Salinas and James Sloan
16 Addressing the Interests of Victims: Perspectives from the Office ofthe Prosecutor&Olivia Swaak-Goldman
17 Victim’s Access to the International Criminal Court: Much Remains to be Done&Gilbert Bitti and Leila Bourguiba
Index