BIBLIOGRAPHY
For extracts from the Greek, Roman, medieval, and a few
of the more modern authorities mentioned, see Masters of
Political Thought, eds. E. McC. Sait and W. T. Jones, 3 vols.
(London and New York, 1963). The controversy between
the followers of J. S. Mill and Lord Devlin is fully dealt
with by Basil Mitchell, Law, Morality and Religion in a
Secular Society (London and New York, 1967); also Patrick
Devlin, “The Enforcement of Morals,” British Academy
Lecture (London and New York, 1959); idem, The Enforce-
ment of Morals (London and New York, 1965); this includes
additional essays. See also E. S. Corwin, Liberty against
Government (Baton Rouge, La., 1948); D. V. Cowen, The
Foundations of Freedom... (Cape Town, 1961), Part II;
A. T. Denning, Freedom under the Law (London, 1949); H.
Street, Freedom, the Individual and the Law (1954; London,
1963; New Orleans, 1964); C. Wirszubski, Libertas as a
Political Idea at Rome (Cambridge and New York, 1950).
For a technical legal analysis of liberty, see G. L. Williams,
“The Concept of Legal Liberty,” Columbia Law Review,
56 (1956), 1121.
R. W. M. DIAS
[See also Authority;
Democracy; Equality;
Free Will; Law,
Natural; Social Contract.]