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14 Apr 2015, 8:01 am
Hannah Arendt, a prominent philosopher. [read post]
27 Aug 2015, 9:39 am
Luban, Georgetown University Law Center, has published Arendt on the Crime of Crimes at 28 Ratio Juris 307 (2015). [read post]
27 Jul 2015, 8:05 am
The author argues that Arendt was very much concerned with the question of an adequate arrangement of law, politics and order – the so-called triad of constitutionalism. [read post]
3 Mar 2007, 2:48 am
Maribel Morey, Princeton (Ph.D. candidate in History), has posted an abstract for a new paper, Contextualizing Hannah Arendt's 'Reflections' in the Little Rock Debates: Arendt Offers an Obsolete Critique of Brown With a Timely Discussion on State Sovereignty. [read post]
24 Dec 2008, 7:23 am
However, and I think Arendt is right to do this, we don't need to make inequality into a (linguistic or otherwise) precondition for equality. [read post]
14 Oct 2013, 10:01 pm by UrizenusSklar
The anniversary has led to a number of museum exhibitions, but also to a reexamination of Hannah Arendt’s famous book Eichmann in Jerusalem – the book in which... [read post]
31 Mar 2011, 5:54 am by Lawrence Solum
Here is the abstract: This paper examines Hannah Arendt's contributions as a theorist of international criminal law. [read post]
5 Aug 2011, 1:10 pm by Lawrence Solum
Michael Wilkinson (London School of Economics & Political Science) has posted Between Freedom and Law: Hannah Arendt on the Promise of Modern Revolution and the Burden of ‘The Tradition’ on SSRN. [read post]
18 Nov 2021, 7:51 am by Tom Smith
Sixty years ago, the émigré political theorist Hannah Arendt argued that American anti-racism is by its very nature beholden to a kind of totalitarian temptation. [read post]
5 Nov 2013, 10:57 am by Katharina Hering
The 2012 film centers on Arendt’s response to the 1961 trial of ex-Nazi Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem, which she covered for The New Yorker, and subsequently published as a book: Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil (1st ed. 1963). [read post]
26 Dec 2006, 9:00 am
This is an interesting and what seems to me appropriately critical assessment of Hannah Arendt and the currently booming academic Arendt industry by political theorist Corey Robin from Brooklyn College and the City University of New York; an excerpt:Perhaps it... [read post]
22 Jan 2020, 8:19 am by Tom Smith
Arendt found Eichmann an ordinary, rather bland, bureaucrat, who in her words, was ‘neither perverted nor sadistic’, but ‘terrifyingly normal’. [read post]
4 Aug 2022, 4:28 pm by Tom Smith
To appreciate Hannah Arendt more fully, I offer here a few additional samples of her writings: The moment we no longer have a free press, anything can happen. [read post]
27 Aug 2015, 9:43 am
Luis Pereira Coutinho, University of Lisbon School of Law, has published Hannah Arendt's Moral Ontology: Comments on David Luban's Arendt on the Crime of Crimes at 28 Ratio Juris 326 (2015). [read post]
13 Jun 2008, 2:24 pm
More about that in a moment.On and off over the past few years I've been reading through the published correspondence of Hannah Arendt. [read post]
17 Aug 2020, 6:03 pm by Tom Smith
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the ideas of Hannah Arendt who examined totalitarianism and politics and, when covering the Eichmann trial, explored 'the banality of evil'. [read post]