Mea Culpa

Mea Culpa

by Steven W. Bender
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date: 09/01/2015

Share This eBook:

  $34.99

In Mea Culpa, Steven W. Bender examines how the United States’ collective shame about its past has shaped the evolution of law and behavior. We regret slavery and segregationist Jim Crow laws. We eventually apologize, while ignoring other oppressions, and our legal response to regret often fails to be transformative for the affected groups. By examining policies and practices that have affected the lives of

groups that have been historically marginalized and oppressed, Bender is able to draw persuasive connections between shame and its eventual legal

manifestations. Analyzing the United States’ historical response to its own atrocities, Bender identifies and develops a definitive moral compass that

guides us away from the policies and practices that lead to societal regret.


Mea Culpa challenges its readers. In a different era, might we have been slave owners or proprietors of a racially segregated establishment? It’s easy to judge immorality in the hindsight of history, but what current practices and policies will later generations regret?


More than a historical survey, this volume offers a framework for resolving some of the most contentious social

problems of our time. Drawing on his background as a legal scholar, Bender tackles immigration, the death penalty, the war on terror, reproductive rights,

welfare, wage inequity, homelessness, mass incarceration, and same-sex marriage. Ultimately, he argues, it is the dehumanization of human beings that

allows for practices to occur that will later be marked as regrettable. And all of us have a stake in standing on the side of history that resists dehumanization.

ISBN:
9781479809813
9781479809813
Category:
Legal history
Format:
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date:
09-01-2015
Language:
English
Publisher:
NYU Press

This item is delivered digitally

You can find this item in:

Show more Show less

Reviews

Be the first to review Mea Culpa.