Guestbook

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April 11, 2003 - 07:24 AM
Alex Sydorenko from Bhutan
www@hotmail.com

Hey Jay, every time that late night, after-midnight Unger hits, why friend, I just hop in the car and drive over to visit the local law library drive-thru. They're always open! Ha ha ha, ho ho ho, hee hee hee.


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February 17, 2003 - 03:31 AM
Michael Fitzgerald from Singapore
mikeatnus@yahoo.ca

Excellent resource. Thanks!


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January 20, 2003 - 01:25 AM
William Wade from the United States
williamwade3@hotmail.com

Thanks for the website!

As a somewhat disenchanted law school student, I have found the CLS movement, especially Unger's works, immensely satisfying--a glimmer of hope, a deconstructionist viewpoint that goes beyond itself to offer actual solutions.

As relevant today as it was when it started, every law student (and lawyer) owes to himself/herself to ponder CLS's idealogy and principles. It would be a waste of time if the only purpose we serve is to perpetuate the status quo.



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January 15, 2003 - 12:57 AM
Raka S from Indonesia
raka@rattanfurni.net -- Web page

good


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November 30, 2002 - 04:48 PM
Marcia Mar from United Kingdom
2001@marart.fsnet.co.uk



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November 05, 2002 - 05:02 PM
Webmaestro from the United States
global5000@theglobe.com -- Web page

Very nice website. Please visit URGENT my website!!! :)


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October 24, 2002 - 08:45 AM
Rand E. Rosenblatt from the United States
rrosenbl@camlaw.rutgers.edu

As one of the founding members of the Critical Legal Studies Movement in 1977, I avidly read Unger's early work when it first appeared. Having gotten out of touch with Unger's subsequent work, I am now enormously impressed with and supported by this website to engage with all of his work again. Bravo! Thank you for this outstanding example of using new technology to support transformative thought and action.


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October 20, 2002 - 10:30 AM
Erik Mangajaya from Indonesia
erik_mangajaya@lycos.com

absolutely interesting


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August 06, 2002 - 11:24 PM
Katheryn Gallant from the United States
klgallan@ucla.edu -- Web page

Obrigada mil vezes pelo site! :-)

Wow... this takes my breath away. I seldom read political philosophy, but I intend to get my hands on Unger's works the first chance I get. As a budding Brazilianist with a fascination for political and social history (I'm in a MA program in Latin American Studies at UCLA), I realize that if Ciro Gomes is elected President of Brazil, Roberto Unger may soon profoundly influence public policy in one of the world's largest countries. That alone should be sufficient reason to read Unger.


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April 5, 2002 - 12:41 PM
carlos a cabral from (unknown)
cacvam@aol.com



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March 21, 2002 - 09:16 AM
Claire Scannell in Law 3 ucc from Ireland

I Love Roberto Unger


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February 26, 2002 - 10:43 AM
Tarcio Cora from the United States
tcora@fedex.com

This is a really good job !


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February 12, 2002 - 12:10 AM
Cícero Freitas from Brazil
cicerofr@bol.com.br

This is a great site.

Anyone willing to know another Brazilian philosopher should visit www.olavodecarvalho.org (bilingual).


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February 11, 2002 - 07:42 AM
kishan s rana from India
kishan@diplomacy.edu

i was much impressed with the novelty of prof. unger's observations on globalization at the workshop he addressed in new delhi in october 2001, and his observation that as large developing countries, brazil and india have a responsibility for developing alternative approaches to one standard formula for globalization that many prescribe.

i was also impressed with the argument that large countries of the south should find new ways to add to the density of their inter-connections, and that this will be of utility in sharing of wider experience on global issues and will produce other kinds of synergies. i have long subscribed to a similar set of ideas, and written about it in my book "inside diplomacy" (manas, new delhi, 2000).

prof unger particularly stresses the value of our experience in developing indegenous models of socio-economic development. two indian examples are the milk and consumer products cooperative Amul, and the network of empowering women, SEWA. we need more such role models and to exchange ideas on how these have grown, to apply the experiences in our own situation.


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January 30, 2002 - 11:03 AM
Philip J Ryan from Ireland



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January 18, 2002 - 02:08 AM
H. Prakash Dharod from India
cyberservice@now-india.net.in

It is a marvelous site to visit and learn how to transform institutional arrangements.


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January 2, 2002 - 07:27 PM
Phillip James Walker from the United States
phil@rushingwalker.com -- Web page

I am a former student of Prof. Unger (at Harvard, 1997). I've been thinking about his critique of neoliberalism and the IMF lately, given the growing crisis in Argentina. He called it right and his ideas deserve wider recognition.


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November 22, 2001 - 09:05 AM
Gerald Brant from Brazil
geraldbrant@hotmail.com

Congratulations on your website. I enjoyed reading your profiles. We share some similarities. I am also Brazilian-American and moved back to Brazil after studying and working for 10 years in the US partly to become engaged in next year's elections. I agree with your excellent Hegel quote on combining thought with action. The political process, both in the US and Brazil, needs thinkers who can act. And that goes for both progressives and free-marketeers like myself. Regards, GB


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November 12, 2001 - 06:53 PM
don daxx from the United States
djdax17@hotmail.com

Hi: As a self-developed critical discerner I believe that both psychology and philosophy are important development basics, but in order to be able to explore those concepts, we must have a free country. When 100% of the media, and almost the same percentage of our politicians use the abhorrent term, democracy, abhorrent to our Founding Fathers, when this country is/was a Constitutional, limited and restricted, representative Republic, our freedoms and liberties are being eroded away to the extent that free, logic and reason, thinking may well be a thing of the past.


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October 6, 2001 - 12:46 PM
Abu Nidal from the United States
abu.nidal@nidal.com -- Web page

You have a very nice website.


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September 5, 2001 - 11:12 AM
B. Wallace/author/Labyrinth of Chaos from the United States
wallacebcm@hotmail.com -- Web page

interesting!


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September 1, 2001 - 10:31 PM
Cícero Freitas from Brazil
cicerofr@hotmail.com



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July 30, 2001 - 01:24 PM
Denis J. Brion from the United States
briond@wlu.edu, dbrion@cfw.com



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