In December 1933, Jerome Frank, the general counsel of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration but better for writing Law and the Modern Mind (1930), a sensational attack on legal formalism, told an audience at the Association of American Law Schools a parable about two lawyers in the New Deal, each forced to interpret same, ambiguous statutory language. The first lawyer, “Mr. Absolute,” reasoned from the text and canons of statutory interpretation without regard for the desirability of the outcome. “Mr. Try-It,” in contrast, began with the outcome he thought desirable. He then said to himself, “The administration is for it, and justifiably so. It is obviously in line with the general intention of Congress as shown by legislative history...
America now is a society addicted to legalism that has lost its faith in legal argument. The impeach...
The late, great Kenneth Culp Davis was known for many things, but humility was not among them. He kn...
If my government service holds any interest for this symposium\u27s other participants and readers, ...
In December 1933, Jerome Frank, the general counsel of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (A...
In December 1933, Jerome Frank, the general counsel of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (A...
In December 1933, Jerome Frank, the general counsel of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration bu...
In December 1933, Jerome Frank, the general counsel of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration bu...
From the neo-Weberian literature on state-building and the political sociology of the legal professi...
From the neo-Weberian literature on state-building and the political sociology of the legal professi...
From the neo-Weberian literature on state-building and the political sociology of the legal professi...
It is telling that the winners of [Daniel] Ernst’s history are not the hardened legal realists whom ...
The practice, teaching, and study of modern administrative law have developed in the midst of academ...
Beginning in the 1920s and 1930s, C. C. Langdell’s traditional model of legal education – a closed s...
The first two terms of Franklin Roosevelt\u27s presidency (1933-1941) were periods of great administ...
John Willis was not just a voice crying in the wilderness. But he was that too. He warned repeatedly...
America now is a society addicted to legalism that has lost its faith in legal argument. The impeach...
The late, great Kenneth Culp Davis was known for many things, but humility was not among them. He kn...
If my government service holds any interest for this symposium\u27s other participants and readers, ...
In December 1933, Jerome Frank, the general counsel of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (A...
In December 1933, Jerome Frank, the general counsel of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (A...
In December 1933, Jerome Frank, the general counsel of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration bu...
In December 1933, Jerome Frank, the general counsel of the Agricultural Adjustment Administration bu...
From the neo-Weberian literature on state-building and the political sociology of the legal professi...
From the neo-Weberian literature on state-building and the political sociology of the legal professi...
From the neo-Weberian literature on state-building and the political sociology of the legal professi...
It is telling that the winners of [Daniel] Ernst’s history are not the hardened legal realists whom ...
The practice, teaching, and study of modern administrative law have developed in the midst of academ...
Beginning in the 1920s and 1930s, C. C. Langdell’s traditional model of legal education – a closed s...
The first two terms of Franklin Roosevelt\u27s presidency (1933-1941) were periods of great administ...
John Willis was not just a voice crying in the wilderness. But he was that too. He warned repeatedly...
America now is a society addicted to legalism that has lost its faith in legal argument. The impeach...
The late, great Kenneth Culp Davis was known for many things, but humility was not among them. He kn...
If my government service holds any interest for this symposium\u27s other participants and readers, ...