Contents; Series preface; Introduction; Part I Ethics and Politics: Green's principles of political obligation, H.A. Prichard; Prichard, Green and moral obligation, Charles H. Monson Jr; Green and the common good: the criticism of incoherence, Peter P. Nicholson; T.H. Green: the common good society, Avital Simhony. Part II Liberty in Political Society: On forcing individuals to be free: T.H. Green's liberal theory of positive freedom, Avital Simhony; , Beyond positive and negative freedom: T.H. Green's view of freedom, Avital Simhony; A new scheme of positive and negative freedom: reconstructing T.H. Green on freedom, Maria Dimova-Cookson. Part III Rights and Political Obligation: The common good and rights in Green's ethical and political theory, A.J.M. Milne; Green's theory of political obligation and disobedience, Paul Harris; T.H. Green on individual rights and the common good, Rex Martin; Green's rights recognition thesis and moral internalism, Gerald F. Gaus. Part IV The Rights of the State: The individualism of T.H. Green, H.D. Lewis; T.H. Green's theory of punishment, Thom Brookes; T.H. Green and the moralization of the market, Phillip Hansen; Property and personal development: an interpretation of T.H. Green's political philosophy, John Morrow; T.H. Green on property and moral responsibility, David Crossley. Part V Green and Victorian Liberalism: T.H. Green and his audience: liberalism as a surrogate faith, Melvin Richter; T.H. Green and state action: liquor legislation, Peter Nicholson; T.H. Green and the religion of citizenship, Andrew Vincent; T.H. Green and the morality of Victorian liberalism, Richard Bellamy; The feminism of T.H. Green: a late-Victorian success story?, Olive Anderson; T.H. Green, advanced liberalism and the reform question 1865-1876, Colin Tyler. Part IV Green in the History of Political Thought: Green and Sidgwick on the community of the good, G.F. Barbour; Green, Rousseau and the culture pattern, D.H. Monro; T.H. Green's doubts ab