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ISBN:9780199737512

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简介

Summary: Publisher Summary 1 Formally, the law is based solely on reasoned analysis, devoid of ideological biases or unconscious influences. Judges claim to act as umpires applying the rules, not making them. They frame their decisions as straightforward applications of an established set of legal doctrines, principles, and mandates to a given set of facts. As most legal scholars understand, however, the impression that the legal system projects is largely an illusion. As far back as 1881, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. made a similar claim, writing that "the felt necessities of the time, the prevalent moral and political theories, intuitions of public policy, avowed or unconscious, even the prejudices which judges share with their fellow-men, have a good deal more to do than the syllogism in determining the rules by which men should be governed." More than a century later, we are now much closer to understanding the mechanisms responsible for the gap between the formal face of the law and the actual forces shaping it. Over the last decade or so, political scientists and legal academics have begun studying the linkages between ideologies, on one hand, and legal principles and policy outcomes on the other. During that same period, mind scientists have turned to understanding the psychological sources of ideology. This book is the first to bring many of the world's experts on those topics together to examine the sometimes unsettling interactions between psychology, ideology, and law, and to better understand what, beyond and beneath the logic, animates the law.  

目录

Table Of Contents:
Contributors xiiii

I Introduction 1(78)

1 Ideology, Psychology, and Law 3(29)

Jon Hanson

2 The End of the End of Ideology 32(47)

John T. Jost

II Correlates and Causes of ideology 79(260)

3 System Justification Theory and Research: Implications for Law, Legal Advocacy, and Social Justice 81(51)

Gary Blasi

John T. Jost

4 Interpersonal Foundations of Ideological Thinking 132(28)

Curtis D. Hardin

Rick M. Cheung

Michael W. Magee

Steven Noel

Kasumi Yoshimura

5 Crowding Out Morality: How the Ideology of Self-Interest Can Be Self-Fulfilling 160(33)

Barry Schwartz

Legal Comment: "A Fine Is Not a Price": Insights for Law 185(8)

Anne L. Alstott

6 Associations Between Law, Competitiveness, and the Pursuit of Self-interest 193(35)

Mitchell J. Callan

Aaron C. Kay

Legal Comment: "You Call, I Hammer!": Adversarial Legalism and Social Influence 219(9)

Douglas A. Kysar

7 Automatic Associations: Personal Attitudes or Cultural Knowledge? 228(37)

Eric Luis Uhlmann

T. Andrew Poehlman

Brian A. Nosek

Legal Comment: The New Cultural Defense 261(4)

Jerry Rang

8 The Policy IAT 265(33)

Jon Hanson

Mark Yeboah

9 Attributions and Ideologies: Two Divergent Visions of Human Behavior Behind Our Laws, Policies, and Theories 298(41)

Adam Benforado

Jon Hanson

III Protection and Preservation of Ideology 339(160)

10 Preference, Principle, and Political Casuistry 341(44)

Eric D. Knowles

Peter H. Ditto

Legal Comment: Warm Reasoning and Legal Proof of Discrimination 380(5)

Martha Chamallas

11 Identity, Belief, and Bias 385(25)

Geoffrey L. Cohen

Legal Comment: Remedying Law's Partiality Through Social Science 404(6)

Andrew M. Perlman

12 Bias Perception and the Spiral of Conflict 410(43)

Kathleen A. Kennedy

Emily Pronin

Legal Comment: The Lawyer as Bias Buffer or Bias Aggravator 447(6)

Robert C. Bordone

13 Seeing Bias: Discrediting and Dismissing Accurate Attributions 453(46)

Adam Benforado

Jon Hanson

IV Ideology in Legal Theory and Law 499(258)

14 Backlash: The Reaction to Mind Sciences in Legal Academia 501(36)

Adam Benforado

Jon Hanson

15 The Mystique of Instrumentalism 537(37)

Tom Tyler

Lindsay Rankin

16 Aggressive Interrogation and Retributive Justice: A Proposed Psychological Model 574(38)

Avani Mehta Sood

Kevin M. Carlsmith

Legal Comment: How to Advocate Against Torture? Understanding and Countering the Dynamics of Support for Abusive Interrogation 605(7)

James L. Cavallaro

17 Two Social Psychologists' Reflections on Situationism and the Criminal Justice System 612(38)

Lee Ross

Donna Shestowsky

18 What's Love Got to Do with It?: Stereotypical Women in Dispositionist Torts 650(34)

Fernanda Nicola

19 Legal Interpretation and Intuitions of Public Policy 684(21)

Joshua Furgeson

Linda Babcock

20 Ideology and the Study of Judicial Behavior 705(24)

Lee Epstein

Andrew D. Martin

Kevin M. Quinn

Jeffrey A. Segal

21 Depoliticizing Administrative Law 729(28)

Cass R. Sunstein

Thomas J. Miles
Index 757

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