Details

Capitalism and the Equity Fetish


Capitalism and the Equity Fetish

Desire, Property, Justice

von: Robert Herian

117,69 €

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 21.01.2021
ISBN/EAN: 9783030665234
Sprache: englisch

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Beschreibungen

This book is a provocative, interdisciplinary, and critical appraisal of civil justice, property, and the laws that shape and command them within capitalism. Dr. Herian’s book is both a complementary and countervailing narrative to many mainstream legal accounts, one that critiques core and influential areas of legal knowledge and practice. Central to the book’s thesis is a rich collaboration of ideas and perspectives that consider what is at stake from institutions, concepts, and practices of equity and civil justice tied to the subjective psychic life and the unconscious desires of capitalist stakeholders. The book aims to address several questions, including how capitalism has imagined and shaped equity and civil justice since the nineteenth century; how capitalism acts as a well-spring of desire for forms of justice that wrap-around and sustain complex frameworks of private property power and ownership; and how equity supports agile neoliberal strategies of justice and reason in the twenty-first century.
<p><b>Foreword</b><br></p><p><b>Chapter 1: Introduction</b></p><p>Why Equity?</p><p>Structure and scope</p><p>Method</p><p>Conclusion</p><p><b>Chapter 2: Setting the Scene</b></p><p>Introduction</p><p>The (ir)rational structure of law</p><p>Am I an Equity fetishist?</p><p><b>Chapter 3: Reform economics and the ‘Plucked Rib’ of Equity</b></p><p>Introduction</p><p>The pleasure, pain, and <i>pannomion</i> of Jeremy Bentham </p><p>The age of reform and capital</p><p>The age of Judicature</p><p><b>Chapter 4: The Road to Complete Justice</b></p><p>Introduction</p>A problem called Chancery<p></p><p>Equity as a means to complete justice</p><p>Conclusion</p><p><b>Chapter 5: Stakeholders of Capitalism</b></p><p>Introduction</p><p>The stakeholder</p><p>Private property power</p><p>Trusts, securities and the fantasy of finding the lost object</p><p>Conclusion</p><p><b>Chapter 6: A Different Theory of Civil Justice</b></p><p>An introduction to Equity fetishism</p><p>The language of Equity </p><p>Freud with Marx</p><p><b>Chapter 7: Fetishism in Action</b></p><p>Introduction</p><p>Fetishism and ideology</p><p>Concepts in relation to fetishism</p><p><b>Chapter 8: Equity Fetishism</b></p><p>Introduction</p>Belief<p></p><p>Disavowal</p><p>Memorialization</p><p>Summary</p><p><b>Chapter 9: Neoliberalism & Equity Fetishism</b></p>Introduction<p></p><p>The law of neoliberalism</p><p>Equity within neoliberal thought</p><p>Legal contortionism as neoliberal strategy</p><p>Conclusion</p><p><b>Chapter 10: Law and the Reality it Masks</b></p><p>Introduction</p><p>(In)competent justice</p><p>The politics of Equity</p><p><b>References</b></p><p> <b>Index</b><br></p>
<div><div><b>Dr. Robert Herian</b> is Senior Lecturer at The Open University Law School (UK) and Co-Founder of the Equity and Trusts Research Network. Robert’s research encompasses equity, trusts, and property law; psychoanalysis; legal history; critical theory and philosophy. He lives in Northwest England with his partner, Chloe, and their border terrier, Billy.</div></div><div><br></div>
<div>This book is a provocative, interdisciplinary, and critical appraisal of civil justice, property, and the laws that shape and command them within capitalism. Dr. Herian’s book is both a complementary and countervailing narrative to many mainstream legal accounts, one that critiques core and influential areas of legal knowledge and practice.&nbsp;&nbsp;Central to the book’s thesis is a rich collaboration of ideas and perspectives that consider what is at stake from institutions, concepts, and practices of equity and civil justice tied to the subjective psychic life and the unconscious desires of capitalist stakeholders. The book aims to address several questions, including how capitalism has imagined and shaped equity and civil justice since the nineteenth century; how capitalism acts as a well-spring of desire for forms of justice that wrap-around and sustain complex frameworks of private property power and ownership; and how equity supports agile neoliberal strategies of justice and reason in the twenty-first century.<br></div>​<div><b>Dr. Robert Herian</b> is Senior Lecturer at The Open University Law School (UK) and Co-Founder of the Equity and Trusts Research Network. Robert’s research encompasses equity, trusts, and property law; psychoanalysis; legal history; critical theory and philosophy.&nbsp; He lives in Northwest England with his partner, Chloe, and their border terrier, Billy.</div>
<p>Is a provocative, interdisciplinary, and critical appraisal of civil justice, property, and the laws that shape and command them within capitalism</p><p>Addresses how capitalism has imagined and shaped equity and civil justice since the nineteenth century</p><p>Highlights how equity supports agile neoliberal strategies of justice and reason in the twenty-first century</p>
<p>Rob Herian’s book breaks new ground in equity. It will become a standard reference point for critical thinking on the jurisprudence of the common law’s peculiar unconscious.</p>

<p>-- <b>Professor Adam Gearey</b>, Birkbeck Law School, University of London<br></p>

<p>In private law theory Equity is either lauded as a jurisprudence of justice or feared as an anti-liberal jurisprudence undermining law and economy alike, while in critical legal theory Equity has largely been overlooked. Dr Herian’s ground-breaking <i>Capitalism and the Equity Fetish </i>is the first sustained critique of Equity’s contribution to and intensification of capitalism, and thereby subverts existing positions on Equity in private law theory and marks the first major analysis of Equity drawing on the critical legal canon. Bringing the resources of critique, particularly the insights of psychoanalysis via Marx and Freud, to bear on Equity and essential questions civil justice in the context of neoliberal capitalism, Dr Herian argues that there is such a thing as an Equity fetish, a psychological effect aimed at achieving ‘complete justice’ within a capitalism, a desire that can never be fulfilled. <i>Capitalism and the Equity Fetish</i> is a <i>tour de force</i>, weaving together legal and economic history and theory with psychoanalysis and political economy; the books contains insights and ideas that cannot be found in the existing literature on Equity and is essential reading for lovers and critics of Equity alike.<br></p>

<p><b>-- Nick Piška</b>, Senior Lecturer in Law, University of Kent and co-founder of the <i>Equity & Trusts Research Network</i><br></p>