“The issues which occupied Julius Stone are still of profound importance and interest to judges and practitioners, solicitors and law teachers. The context changes, but the problems remain. … this collection is an appropriate recognition of his continuing influence” -- Murray Gleeson AC
Scholars from Australia and overseas explore the striking and continuing influence of Julius Stone to legal theory and international law. They introduce new work in the fields in which Stone was both a pioneer and a leader, celebrate his life and acknowledge his impact on generations of Australian lawyers.
CONTENTS:
Part One: Julius Stone’s Life and Influence
Julius Stone and the Legal Profession
By Murray Gleeson
Julius Stone: A Reflection
By Adrienne Stone
The Gift of Realism: Julius Stone and the International Law Academy in Australia
By Fleur Johns
The Role of Universities: Views of a Scholar of the Last Century
By Jonathan Stone
Julius Stone and the Eichmann Trial: A Duty to Learn?
By Kristen Rundle
Part Two: Sociological Jurisprudence
Revisiting Social Dimensions of Law and Justice in a Post-human Era
By Upendra Baxi
The Province of Jurisprudence (Really) Redetermined
By Allan C Hutchinson
Incompatible Law Jobs
By Michael Robertson
Two Concepts of Social Equality
By Wojciech Sadurski
Gender, Race, Bias and Perspective: Or, How Otherness Colours your Judgment
By Reg Graycar
Free Trade and Justice: A Discomfiting Liaison
By Margaret Thornton
Social Justice and the Judiciary: A Comparative Point of View
By Maurice Adams
The Rule of Law as the Key for Effective Governance: The Dilemma of Post-Communism
By Klaus A Ziegert
Part Three: International Law
World Society before Globalisation: Some Insights from Julius Stone
By David B Goldman
Transitional Justice after Mass Violence: Reconciling Retributive and Restorative Justice
By Wendy Lambourne
Julius Stone and the Question of Palestine in International Law
By Ben Saul
Index