The positive literature on judicial behavior has not received nearly the attention it deserves. That literature has a great deal to offer, both to legal scholars and to those who are concerned about the role of legal institutions generally. For example, the literature has the potential to help shed light on the ability of courts to protect rights and foster economic development. This article argues that the positive literature has failed to see its due in large part because positive scholars often do not take law and legal institutions seriously enough. The article identifies three specific sets of problems with the positive scholarship, offering detailed suggestions on how positive scholars can avoid them. The first is the problem of norma...
This article responds to Justice Kirby's recent praise of law reviews. It will be argued that law re...
Should legal academics begin to engage in a greater degree of empirical scholarship, I believe that ...
This Article describes the origins of three movements in legal academia: empirical legal studies (EL...
The positive literature on judicial behavior has not received nearly the attention it deserves. That...
My main claim in this article is that lawyers should make less use of the hermeneutical method than ...
article published in law reviewFor forty years, legal academics have been lost in a wilderness born ...
Over the last century, empirical legal scholarship has joined the ranks of the mainstream within the...
The starting point of this Article is Richard Posner\u27s statement of regret (in 1975) that, in ter...
Legal scholarship, under attack from critics both inside and outside the legal academy, is on the ho...
The very premise of judicial review in America is rooted in the structure of natural law. Judges hav...
In this paper, which was prepared to help set the stage at an interdisciplinary conference held at t...
For a long time philosophy has been unique among the humanities for seeking closer alliance with the...
This article explores one of the most important sources of judicial education, the law review. Part ...
The article takes up the question of how best to put the increasing amount of interdisciplinary scho...
Courts are never able to live up to the standards set for them by legal scholars. We know that the s...
This article responds to Justice Kirby's recent praise of law reviews. It will be argued that law re...
Should legal academics begin to engage in a greater degree of empirical scholarship, I believe that ...
This Article describes the origins of three movements in legal academia: empirical legal studies (EL...
The positive literature on judicial behavior has not received nearly the attention it deserves. That...
My main claim in this article is that lawyers should make less use of the hermeneutical method than ...
article published in law reviewFor forty years, legal academics have been lost in a wilderness born ...
Over the last century, empirical legal scholarship has joined the ranks of the mainstream within the...
The starting point of this Article is Richard Posner\u27s statement of regret (in 1975) that, in ter...
Legal scholarship, under attack from critics both inside and outside the legal academy, is on the ho...
The very premise of judicial review in America is rooted in the structure of natural law. Judges hav...
In this paper, which was prepared to help set the stage at an interdisciplinary conference held at t...
For a long time philosophy has been unique among the humanities for seeking closer alliance with the...
This article explores one of the most important sources of judicial education, the law review. Part ...
The article takes up the question of how best to put the increasing amount of interdisciplinary scho...
Courts are never able to live up to the standards set for them by legal scholars. We know that the s...
This article responds to Justice Kirby's recent praise of law reviews. It will be argued that law re...
Should legal academics begin to engage in a greater degree of empirical scholarship, I believe that ...
This Article describes the origins of three movements in legal academia: empirical legal studies (EL...