Contents: Hegel After Marxism? Locating Hegelian Legal Theory in Both its Historical and Contemporary Contexts: Hegel's politico-legal philosophy: a re-evaluation, Edgar Bodenheimer; Hegel's philosophy of right and Marx's critique: a reassessment, Robert Fine; Hegel, Marx and the concept of immanent critique, Andrew Buchwalter. Hegel and Common Law: a Rationale for Property and Contractual Rights: The common law according to Hegel, William N R. Lucy; Obligation, contract and exchange: on the significance of Hegel's abstract right, Seyla Benhabib; Hegel and the autonomy of contract law, Chad McCracken; Hegel and the social dynamics of property law, M.G. Salter. Individual Rights within a Liberal Constitutional Framework: a Necessary but Insufficient Basis for Organizing a Rational State: Hegel's ambiguous legacy for modern liberalism, Charles Taylor; Hegel's critique of liberal theories of rights, Peter G. Stillman; Towards a critical theory of constitutional law: Hegel's contribution, Michael Salter and Julia J.A.
Shaw. Hegelian Legal Theory in the Context of Law and Economics, Schmittian and Habermasian Jurisprudence: Toward a more 'just' economics of justice - a review essay, Gary Minda; Rethinking politics: Carl Schmitt vs. Hegel, Richard Dien Winfield. Hegelianism, Gender-Roles and Feminist Legal and Political Theory: On Hegel, women and irony, Seyla Benhabib; Persons and available identities: gender in Hegel's philosophy of law, Valerie Kerruish; Hegel's Antigone, Patricia Jagentowicz Mills. Law and Punishment: the Continuing Tension Between the Duty to Obey Positive Laws and Various Conceptions of 'Natural Rights': Hegel's idea of punishment, Peter G. Stillman; Hegel on justified disobedience, Mark Tunick; Rediscovering Hegel's theory of crime and punishment, Markus Dirk Dubber; Hegel's critique of liberalism and natural law: reconstructing ethical life, Abel Garza Jr; Name index.