This is a "necessary "book for our times.--Breyten Breytenbach, author of "Windcatcher" "This is a tour de force: a witty, profound and powerful successor to her breakthrough book, "Evil in Modern Thought.
Voltaire turned what might have been an obscure provincial case into a European campaign, collecting money and hiring lawyers for the Calas family as well as writing reams about the story. Either way, he believed, the case showed ...
Dershowitz wrote this book to warn the world that unless Hamas’s strategy of building terror tunnels and firing rockets from behind human shields is denounced and stopped—by the international community, the media, the academy, and good ...
Bill Bennett makes a case for our moral duty in the world and why the anti-war left, right and center are wrong.
In Electile Dysfunction, Harvard Law professor and frequent Fox News commentator Alan Dershowitz looks at what was at stake—with political extremism on the rise abroad and civil discourse on the decline in the US. He then assesses how ...
Audrey R. Chapman, Perspectives on the Role of Forgiveness in the Human Rights Violations Hearings, in Chapman and Van der Merwe, ... Robert W. Taylor and Eric J. Fritsch, Juvenile Justice: Policies, Programs and Practices 313 (4th ed.
Murrow could torpedo Senator Joseph McCarthy's activities on the House Committee on Un-American Activities, and was safe even when McCarthy turned his accusations against Murrow.
The clock is ticking. We must find ways to repair the damage this deal threatens to do. This book proposes solutions along with its constructive criticism.
This is a passionately argued book from a man who carries supreme moral authority to make the case he does here: that the spread of democracy everywhere is not only possible, but also essential to the survival of our civilization.
That is why decisions regarding Iran’s nuclear program are among the most important of our time. Here, Harvard Law Professor Emeritus Alan Dershowitz argues that the negotiations that led to this bad deal were deeply flawed.