Robin West

Summary

Robin West (born 1954) is the Frederick J. Haas Professor of Law and Philosophy emerita at the Georgetown University Law Center. West's research is primarily concerned with feminist legal theory, constitutional law and theory, philosophy of law, and the law and literature movement.

Robin L. West
EducationUniversity of Maryland (JD), Stanford University (JSM), University of Maryland, Baltimore County (BA)
Notable work"Jurisprudence and Gender" (1988)
EraContemporary philosophy
InstitutionsGeorgetown University Law Center
Main interests
Philosophy of law, feminist legal theory, ethics of care

West holds a B.A. and a J.D. (1979) from the University of Maryland and a masters in judicial studies from Stanford. West came to Georgetown after teaching at the University of Maryland Law School from 1986 to 1991, and at the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law from 1982 to 1985.

West is best known for her work in the ethics of care and feminist legal theory. West has argued that the liberal view of people as autonomous individuals is only superficially true from a masculine perspective[1] in her most famous work, "Jurisprudence and Gender." She has also published extensively on the concept of consent in sexual, legal, and institutional contexts.

Selected works edit

Books edit

  • West, Robin (1993). Narrative, authority, and law: law, meaning, and violence.
  • West, Robin (1994). Progressive constitutionalism: reconstructing the Fourteenth Amendment.
  • West, Robin (1997). Caring for justice.
  • West, Robin (2000). Rights.
  • West, Robin (2003). Re-imagining justice: progressive interpretations of formal equality, rights, and the rule of law.
  • West, Robin (2011). Normative jurisprudence.

Journal articles edit

See also: Nussbaum, Martha C. (Summer 2008). "Robin West, "Jurisprudence and Gender": defending a radical liberalism" (PDF). University of Chicago Law Review. 75 (3). University of Chicago Law School: 985–996. JSTOR 20141934. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-05.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Feminist Jurisprudence | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy".

External links edit

  • Faculty page at Georgetown Law