Random Justice: On Lotteries and Legal Decision-Making
by
Neil Duxbury
This controversial book explores the potential for the use of lotteries in social, and particularly legal, decision-making contexts. Neil Duxbury considers in detail the history, advantages, and drawbacks of deciding issues of social significance by lot and argues that the value of the lottery as a legal decision-making device has generally been underestimated.
Paperback, 192 pages
Published
November 28th 2002
by Oxford University Press, USA
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