In the spring of 1999, I published a little book with a big title: The Cultural Study of Law, Reconstructing Legal Scholarship. The ambition of the book was to clear a space within law schools for a study of law that was not directed at the issue of legal reform. I urged a theoretical approach free of the insistent question: What should the law be? The reasons for my plea were not new. The rule of law, I argued, is not just a set of rules to be applied to an otherwise independent social order. Rather, law is, in part, constitutive of the self-understanding of individuals and communities. In particular, Americans often identify themselves as citizens within a polity characterized by the rule of law. This is not the only way in which Americ...
This brief essay describes what critical legal scholars said – or perhaps more accurately – would ha...
Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think...
A minimal, reasonably uncontroversial, demand of a legal system is that it should stabilize a polity...
In the spring of 1999, I published a little book with a big title: The Cultural Study of Law, Recons...
This paper shall focus on the evolving features of autonomy and normativity in Western societies. Th...
Law is a symbolic system that structures the political imagination. The rule of law is a shorthand...
Law schools, both innovative and traditional, cutting edge and hidebound, demand and therefore teach...
A few years ago I published a book, The Nature of Law, which was activated primarily by three long h...
Few would dispute that law and legal procedures lie at the core of American self-identity and are wo...
Is a cultural study of the law possible? Of course it is: Law is part of culture, and its discourse ...
The Rule of Law is a venerable concept, but, on closer inspection, it is a complex admixture of po...
“In the past century, we studied the law from within. The jurists of today are studying it from wit...
What is the American rule of law? Is it a paradigm case of the strong constitutionalism concept of t...
When, not long since, I was asked to try to explain the function--if any--of law in a democratic soc...
Historically, the Philosophy of Law has pro has pro vided a dynamic and influential framework in whi...
This brief essay describes what critical legal scholars said – or perhaps more accurately – would ha...
Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think...
A minimal, reasonably uncontroversial, demand of a legal system is that it should stabilize a polity...
In the spring of 1999, I published a little book with a big title: The Cultural Study of Law, Recons...
This paper shall focus on the evolving features of autonomy and normativity in Western societies. Th...
Law is a symbolic system that structures the political imagination. The rule of law is a shorthand...
Law schools, both innovative and traditional, cutting edge and hidebound, demand and therefore teach...
A few years ago I published a book, The Nature of Law, which was activated primarily by three long h...
Few would dispute that law and legal procedures lie at the core of American self-identity and are wo...
Is a cultural study of the law possible? Of course it is: Law is part of culture, and its discourse ...
The Rule of Law is a venerable concept, but, on closer inspection, it is a complex admixture of po...
“In the past century, we studied the law from within. The jurists of today are studying it from wit...
What is the American rule of law? Is it a paradigm case of the strong constitutionalism concept of t...
When, not long since, I was asked to try to explain the function--if any--of law in a democratic soc...
Historically, the Philosophy of Law has pro has pro vided a dynamic and influential framework in whi...
This brief essay describes what critical legal scholars said – or perhaps more accurately – would ha...
Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think...
A minimal, reasonably uncontroversial, demand of a legal system is that it should stabilize a polity...