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Tables of Contents for Analysis of Law in the Marxist Tradition
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
FOREWORD
i
 
PREFACE
vii
 
INTRODUCTION
1
24
The Need and Purpose
1
6
Methodology
7
2
The Specificities
9
13
Marx and Engels
9
3
The People's Courts
12
2
The Theorists
14
6
Theoretical Synthesis
20
1
Towards a Model
21
1
Conclusion
22
1
The Goal
22
3
CHAPTER ONE-MARX AND ENGELS
25
40
Introduction
25
1
The Basis
26
20
Legal and economic relations in capitalism
29
6
Legal and economic relations in socialism
35
11
Further Clarifications
46
13
Introduction
46
2
Human nature
48
5
Freedom
53
1
Authority
53
2
Democracy
55
4
Summary
59
6
CHAPTER TWO-The People's Courts
65
56
Introduction
65
6
Legal Concepts of Lenin
71
6
Law in communism
71
3
Conceptual foundations of law in the transition period
74
3
The People's Courts
77
25
Structural reorganisation
77
4
The operation of the early courts
81
10
Early decision-making
91
6
Moves towards centralisation
97
2
Further centralisation: the N.E.P
99
3
Analysis
102
19
Introduction
102
2
Economic conditions and legal relations
104
2
Control over production
106
3
The institutional nature of the People's Courts
109
1
The role of force
110
5
Social vs political power
115
1
Theoretical implications
116
2
A note on the People's Courts and the transition period
118
3
CHAPTER THREE-THE THEORISTS
121
56
Introduction
121
4
Stuchka
125
12
Summary
136
1
Pashukanis
137
21
The general theory
138
2
Commodity fetishism and its social relations
140
3
The legal relation
143
1
Law as a resolution of conflicts
144
3
Law and the state
147
2
Equivalence and punishment
149
2
Law in socialism
151
2
Regulation in communism
153
2
Morality
155
2
Summary
157
1
Reisner-An Anomaly
158
6
Analysis
164
13
The People's Courts revisited
164
6
The economic link
170
1
Institutions of regulation operating within social power
171
1
Obligation
171
1
A move towards definition
172
5
CHAPTER FOUR-THEORETICAL SYNTHESIS
177
68
Summation
177
4
Theoretical Explanation
181
16
Direct control
182
10
Coercion and obligation
192
5
Difficulties with Needs-based Production
197
10
Introduction
197
3
Abundance
200
1
The calculation of needs
201
2
How production is organised
203
3
Conclusion
206
1
Regulation
207
16
The nature of conflicts
211
1
Conflict resolution
211
10
General description
221
2
Complexities of Regulation
223
22
Violence
224
3
Undue influence
227
3
Diversity
230
5
Rights and obligations
235
10
CHAPTER FIVE-TOWARDS A MODEL
245
36
Introduction
245
1
Structural Components of Regulation
246
5
The purpose
246
1
Structural form-the institutions
247
3
Authority and institutions
250
1
A Concise Overview of Regulation
251
5
The Kibbutz-An Historical Example
256
25
General description
256
2
The usefulness of the example
258
2
The kibbutz Vatik
260
4
Work cooperation
264
3
General relations
267
1
Conflicts
268
3
Other kibbutz studies in conflict
271
2
Observations
273
3
Social bond or socially bonded?
276
5
CHAPTER SIX-CONCLUSIONS
281
44
Introduction
281
2
Is Regulation Law?
283
26
The coercion factor
283
6
The institutional distinction and norms
289
10
The procedural distinction
299
4
Conclusion
303
6
A Separate Jurisprudence?
309
12
Positivism
310
4
Natural law
314
4
The sociological school
318
2
Conclusion
320
1
Further Work
321
4
BIBLIOGRAPHY
325
26
INDEX
351