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Representing Justice: Table of Contents
Preface
Chapter One: A Remnant of the Renaissance - The Transnational Iconography of Justice
Chapter Two: Civic Space, the Public Square, and Good Governance
Chapter Three: Obedience - The Judge as the Loyal Servant of the State
Chapter Four: Of Eyes and Ostriches
Chapter Five: Why Eyes? Color, Blindness, and Impartiality
Chapter Six: Representation and Abstractions - Identity, Politics, and Rights
Chapter Seven: From Seventeenth-Century Town Halls to Twentieth-Century Courts
Chapter Eight: A Building and Litigation Boom in Twentieth-Century Federal Courts
Chapter Nine: Late Twentieth-Century United States Courts: Monumentality, Security, and Eclectic Imagery
Chapter Ten: Monuments to the Present and Museums of the Past - National Courts (and Prisons)
Chapter Eleven: Constructing Regional Rights
Chapter Twelve: Multi-Jurisdictional Premises - From Peace to Crimes
Chapter Thirteen: From "Rites" to Rights
Chapter Fourteen: Courts - In and Out of Sight, Site, and Cite
Chapter Fifteen: An Iconography for Democratic Adjudication
Selected Bibliography