Cambridge Studies in Economics, Choice, and Society
812 Kč
Odesíláme do 1 až 2 týdnů
Sleva až 70% u třetiny knih
Using evidence and arguments from neuroscience and evolutionary psychology, Morris B. Hoffman traces the development of deeply held legal principles throughout human evolution, describing how the drives to punish and forgive became codified into our legal system, and the responsibility for punishing and forgiving assigned to a judge and jury.
Autor: | Hoffman, Morris B. (University of Colorado Boulder) |
Nakladatel: | Cambridge University Press |
ISBN: | 9781107038066 |
Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Jazyk : | Angličtina |
Vazba: | Hardback |
Počet stran: | 368 |
Mohlo by se vám také líbit..
-
Business and Human Rights
-
Trust in Early Modern International ...
Schroder Jorg-Peter
-
An Introduction to the Comparative St...
Gordley, James; Mehren, Arthur T. von
-
International Organizations
Hurd, Ian
-
The International Law on Foreign Inve...
Sornarajah, M. (National University of Singapore)
-
An Introduction to International Econ...
Reinert, Kenneth A. (Professor of Public Policy, School of Policy, Government, and International Affairs, Professor of P
-
Studies in Interactional Sociolingui...
Matoesian, Gregory (University of Illinois, Chicago); Gilbert, Kristin Enola (University of Illinois, Chicago)
-
Crime Prevention
Gledhill, Adam; Phillippo, Pam; Adams, Mark; Mulligan, Chris; Sutton, Louise; Taylor, Richard; Wilmot, Nick; Barker, Ray
-
Paper Tiger
Mathur, Nayanika (University of Cambridge)
-
Roman Law in European History
Stein, Peter
-
Architectures of Earth System Govern...
-
Moral and Political Conceptions of H...
-
The Cambridge Companion to Comparativ...
-
Shari'a
Hallaq, Wael B.
-
Property without Rights
Albertus, Michael (University of Chicago); Menaldo, Victor (University of Washington)
-
Gerrymandering the States
Keena, Alex (Virginia Commonwealth University); Latner, Michael (California Polytechnic State University); McGann, Antho