Neighborhood Justice in Capitalist Society: The Expansion of the Informal State
By (Author) Richard Hofrichter
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
12th August 1987
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
303.33
Hardback
225
The management of interpersonal social conflict within the American judicial system is changing. Of particular interest is the trend toward informal, decentralized alternatives to the courts for the resolution of many civil disputes. A manifestation of this trend, Neighborhood Dispute Resolution or NDR offers a means of resolving conflicts in a voluntary, peaceable manner without the intervention of attorneys. Proponents of NDR say that it is economical, efficient and fair. NDR, however, may not be the panacea it appears to be on the surface, argues the author. A Marxist interpretation of recent developments in state-sponsored alternatives to courts for the resolution of disputes, this book devises a framework for exploring the relationship between disruptions in reproducing the social order of American capitalism and transformations in the capitalist state that make these dispute mechanisms possible.
. . . The text is an illuminating, stimulating, and theoretically informed read which should not be missed by sociologists of the state and the law. It is provocative, and those who worship blindly at the altar of liberal reform will likely be outraged. It could be a useful teaching tool in upper-level undergraduate and graduate classes, particularly since it provides an excellent example of the way in which theory and empirical investigation can be successfully blended.-Criminal Justice Review
." . . The text is an illuminating, stimulating, and theoretically informed read which should not be missed by sociologists of the state and the law. It is provocative, and those who worship blindly at the altar of liberal reform will likely be outraged. It could be a useful teaching tool in upper-level undergraduate and graduate classes, particularly since it provides an excellent example of the way in which theory and empirical investigation can be successfully blended."-Criminal Justice Review
RICHARD HOFRICHTER is a Policy Analyst for the Public Policy Institute, the American Association of Retired Persons.