1: Real and Fictitious Entities
2: The Principle of Utility
3: Natural Law and Natural Rights
4: The French Revolution
5: The Emergence of Sinister Interest
6: Parliamentary Reform
7: The Church
8: Colonies and Constitutional Law
9: Codification, Constitutional Law, and Republicanism
10: Publicity, Responsibility, and the Architecture of
Government
11: The Antidote to Sinister Interest: Official Aptitude
12: The Politics of Law Reform
13: Last Things
Bibliography
Index
Winner: W. J. M. Mackenzie Book Prize
Philip Schofield joined the Bentham Project, based at University
College London, in 1984. He joined the Faculty of Laws as a
Lecturer in 1993, and was subsequently appointed to a Readership
and then to a personal Chair in the History of Legal and Political
Thought. He was appointed Joint General Editor, with Frederick
Rosen, of The Collected Works of Jeremy Bentham in 1995, and has
been sole General Editor since 2003. He has been Director of the
Bentham
Project since 2001.
...anyone who wants to understand Bentham's evolution into radical democrat must now start with this thorough study. William Thomas, English Historical Review ' Utility and Democracy is in a class by itself, demonstrating a complete command of the subject, and bringing twenty years of careful research to vivid life. Schofield brilliantly unpacks the development of Bentham's thought across a wide range of topics, from his famous principle of utility to his views on constitutional and parliamentary reform in a true tour de force. Schofield's Utility and Democracy will undoubtedly be the leading work on the subject for some years to come.' Political Studies Association, WJM Mackenzie Book Prize Panel 2006
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