Barbara Hudson is a Professor in Law at the University of Central Lancashire. She has published extensively on socio-legal studies, criminology and penology. Her special teaching interests are in race and criminal justice; feminist jurisprudence; desert theory; restorative justice; comparative criminology and penology. She has research interests in penal theory and penal ethics; race, gender, crime and justice; the punishment of impoverished offenders; emergent theories of justice; probation; risk and criminal justice.
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Description
PART ONE: CHALLENGING LIBERAL JUSTICE Justice in the Liberal Tradition Risk and the Politics of Safety Justice Endangered The Communitarian Challenge Identity and Difference Feminist and Postmodernist Critiques of Liberalism PART TWO: REAFFIRMING JUSTICE Reaffirming Modernity Habermas and Discourse Ethics Giving Difference its Due Discourse and Alterity Doing Justice in the Risk Society
`Hudson's Justice in the Risk Society is stunning in the depth and breadth of its scholarship. In examining the challenges the risk society presents for established conceptions of justice she compels a profound rethinking of what justice does, and can, mean. Her analysis will frame and inspire future debate' - Clifford Shearing, Professor, Law Program, Research School of Social Science, Australian National University `Remarkably comprehensive, ambitious in its scope and morally compelling. Barbara Hudson draws skilfully from a wide range of frameworks... She asks fundamental questions about the nature of justice and argues for a radical rethink of liberalism. She explores complex subject matter in a clear and accessible fashion. This excellent book will surely reinvigorate theoretical thinking on the nature of punishment for years to come' - Kieran McEvoy, Professor of Law and Transitional Justice, School of Law, Queen's University Belfast