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Inevitable Peace
Carl Joachim Friedrich
Harvard University Press

front cover of The Philosophy of Law in Historical Perspective
The Philosophy of Law in Historical Perspective
Carl Joachim Friedrich
University of Chicago Press, 1963
Mr. Friedrich develops his own position within the framework of the history of Western legal philosophy from the Old Testament down to contemporary writers. In addition, he highlights some important problems of the present day, including certain aspects of legal realism. First published in 1958, this book has been revised and enlarged.
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Responsible Bureaucracy
A Study of the Swiss Civil Service
Carl J. Friedrich and Taylor Cole
Harvard University Press
In presenting a systematic concept of bureaucracy, the authors have made an analysis which involves, among other matters, the question of the supposed antithesis between bureaucracy and responsible government. The particular bureaucracy analyzed is that of Switzerland, consideration being given to matters of internal organization, personnel, and the explanation and extent of the syndicalist movement in the Swiss public service. The volume presents a real basis upon which comparative analysis must rest. It will be found unusually valuable by teachers of political science and students of European political institutions.
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Totalitarian Dictatorship and Autocracy
Second Edition, Revised by Carl J. Friedrich
Carl J. Friedrich and Zbigniew K. Brzezinski
Harvard University Press

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Totalitarianism
Proceedings of a Conference Held at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, March 1953
Carl J. Friedrich
Harvard University Press

This collaborative volume explores the challenge of totalitarianism, and more especially the issue of freedom and totalitarianism, in the world today. It is the outgrowth of a conference on totalitarianism held by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences last year. The participants, who represent many fields and interests, successively consider ideological and psychological aspects of the problem, and then totalitarianism in its relation to intellectual life and to social and economic organization. In conclusion they look at totalitarianism and the future.

The contributors to the volume are: George F. Kennan, Jerzy G. Gliksman, N. E. Timasheff, Carl J. Friedrich, Alex Inkeles, Franklin H. Littell, Waldemar Gurian, Raymond Bauer, Erik H. Erikson, Else Frenkel-Brunswik, Marie Jahoda, Stuart W. Cook, H. J. Muller, Georgede Santillana, Bertram D. Wolfe, Albert Lauterbach, J. P. Nettl, Karl W. Deutsch, Paul Kecskemeti, Harold D. Lasswell, Andrew Gyorgy.

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