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E-raamat: Law and Consent: Contesting the Common Sense

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Jun-2019
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780429877353
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Jun-2019
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780429877353

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Consent is used in many different social and legal contexts with the pervasive

understanding that it is, and has always been, about autonomy but has it?

Beginning with an overview of consents role in law today, this book investigates

the doctrines inseparable association with personal autonomy and its effect

in producing both idealised and demonised forms of personhood and agency.

This prompts a search for alternative understandings of consent. Through an

exploration of sexual offences in Antiquity, medical practice in the Middle Ages,

and the regulation of bodily harm on the present-day sports field, this book

demonstrates that, in contrast to its common sense story of autonomy, consent

more often operates as an act of submission than as a form of personal freedom

or agency. The book explores the implications of this counter-narrative for the

laws contemporary uses of consent, arguing that the kind of freedom consent is

meant to enact might be foreclosed by the very frame in which we think about

autonomy itself.

This book will be of interest to scholars of many aspects of law, history, and

feminism as well as students of criminal law, bioethics, and political theory.
Acknowledgements ix
List of abbreviations
xi
Introduction 1(19)
Law and consent: a tale of contradictions
4(3)
Consent's autonomy story
7(4)
Methodology: a juridical genealogy of consent
11(3)
Charting the course: a chapter outline
14(6)
1 The common sense of consent
20(32)
Mediated magic: paternalism and its paradox
21(5)
The parameters of consent: productive preconditions
26(14)
Voluntariness
26(3)
Knowledge
29(6)
Rationality
35(5)
Conceptualising the common: tacit consent and intelligibility
40(7)
Conclusion
47(5)
2 Ancient sex
52(25)
Regulating sex among the ancients
54(11)
Offences of hubris
55(4)
Offences of bia/raptus
59(3)
Offences of moicheia/stuprum
62(3)
Ancient outlaws: unintelligible acts
65(6)
(Post)modern reflections
71(2)
Conclusion
73(4)
3 Medieval medicine
77(34)
Medieval medicine: a monastic enterprise
82(7)
Regulating access
83(1)
Theory over practice
83(3)
Christian alignment
86(3)
Medieval doctors and their patients: a match made in heaven
89(5)
Medieval consent: coupling, conversion, and commerce
94(8)
The medieval doctor-patient relationship: `The way, the truth and the light'
102(5)
Conclusion
107(4)
4 Modern sport
111(47)
Harmful horseplay: consent and contact sports
118(12)
Foul play: Fighting in sports
125(5)
`No sissy stuff': harm and hegemonic masculinity in sport
130(11)
Capitalism with the gloves off: consent and body capital in sport
141(9)
Conclusion
150(8)
5 The political economy of consent
158(61)
Neoliberal rationality: touched by an invisible hand
159(11)
The market rationality: an origin-less story
161(2)
The neoliberal subject: a normative ontology
163(7)
Consent within a capitalist logic: revisiting criminal and medical law
170(29)
Social utility in a neoliberal world
171(12)
The capacity to consent: an act of self-governance
183(16)
Conclusion
199(8)
Conclusion
207(12)
Index 219
Karla M. O'Regan is an Associate Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice at St. Thomas University, Canada.