Chapter 3: Reform economics and the ‘Plucked Rib’ of Equity
Introduction
The pleasure, pain, and pannomion of Jeremy Bentham
The age of reform and capital
The age of Judicature
Chapter 4: The Road to Complete Justice
Introduction
A problem called Chancery
Equity as a means to complete justice
Conclusion
Chapter 5: Stakeholders of Capitalism
Introduction
The stakeholder
Private property power
Trusts, securities and the fantasy of finding the lost object
Conclusion
Chapter 6: A Different Theory of Civil Justice
An introduction to Equity fetishism
The language of Equity
Freud with Marx
Chapter 7: Fetishism in Action
Introduction
Fetishism and ideology
Concepts in relation to fetishism
Chapter 8: Equity Fetishism
Introduction
Belief
Disavowal
Memorialization
Summary
Chapter 9: Neoliberalism & Equity Fetishism
Introduction
The law of neoliberalism
Equity within neoliberal thought
Legal contortionism as neoliberal strategy
Conclusion
Chapter 10: Law and the Reality it Masks
Introduction
(In)competent justice
The politics of Equity
References
Index
Dr. Robert Herian is Senior Lecturer at The Open University Law School (UK) and Co-Founder of the Equity and Trusts Research Network. Robert’s research encompasses equity, trusts, and property law; psychoanalysis; legal history; critical theory and philosophy. He lives in Northwest England with his partner, Chloe, and their border terrier, Billy.
This book is a provocative, interdisciplinary, and critical appraisal of civil justice, property, and the laws that shape and command them within capitalism. Dr. Herian’s book is both a complementary and countervailing narrative to many mainstream legal accounts, one that critiques core and influential areas of legal knowledge and practice. Central to the book’s thesis is a rich collaboration of ideas and perspectives that consider what is at stake from institutions, concepts, and practices of equity and civil justice tied to the subjective psychic life and the unconscious desires of capitalist stakeholders. The book aims to address several questions, including how capitalism has imagined and shaped equity and civil justice since the nineteenth century; how capitalism acts as a well-spring of desire for forms of justice that wrap-around and sustain complex frameworks of private property power and ownership; and how equity supports agile neoliberal strategies of justice and reason in the twenty-first century.
Dr. Robert Herian is Senior Lecturer at The Open University Law School (UK) and Co-Founder of the Equity and Trusts Research Network. Robert’s research encompasses equity, trusts, and property law; psychoanalysis; legal history; critical theory and philosophy. He lives in Northwest England with his partner, Chloe, and their border terrier, Billy.