Postmodem Legal Movements does two things. First, the bulk of the book provides an overview of American jurisprudence, from Christopher Columbus Langdell to the present. This overview is necessary because, in order to understand postmodem forms of jurisprudence, we must first explore what came before postmodernism, that is, modernism (p. 5). Second, the relatively short latter portion of the book presents an argument about the current state of American legal scholarship and its future. Minda\u27s picture of contemporary legal thought is that of a paradigm shift in the making. Postmodern Legal Movements will prove useful to those in search of a basic introduction to the standard account of American legal thought. Minda is well read in juri...
This fine book amplifies and applies the pragmatic theories which Posner—a founder of the law and ec...
This is one of the last of the notable Continental Legal History Series of which eight volumes have ...
This is a reprint of an article from a recent issue of the Columbia Law Review. It appears with a F...
Postmodem Legal Movements does two things. First, the bulk of the book provides an overview of Ameri...
It is probably an understatement to say that our profession has had its fair quota of smugness. Yet ...
The hypothesis of continuity has now been ably tested and challenged by William E. Nelson\u27s fine ...
Laura Kalman\u27s monograph, originally a dissertation, is nevertheless a fresh and rather engaging ...
IN the maze of currents and cross-currents that characterize contemporarywriting on jurisprudence an...
Law exists in primitive societies, and its study has value for civilized peoples. Its paramount valu...
This book contains seven chapters discussing the following as possible sources of law: the Sovereign...
This Book Review examines Law School: Legal Education in America from the 1850s to the 1980s, by Rob...
According to the jacket-blurb which accompanies the book: Thissearching interpretation, which conne...
Book review of: One case at a time: judicial minimalism on the Supreme Court. By Cass R. Sunstein. H...
The title of this brilliant little volume might, more accurately, have been, The Spirits of the Com...
Benjamin Barton and Stephanos Bibas’s new book, Rebooting Justice: More Technology, Fewer Lawyers, a...
This fine book amplifies and applies the pragmatic theories which Posner—a founder of the law and ec...
This is one of the last of the notable Continental Legal History Series of which eight volumes have ...
This is a reprint of an article from a recent issue of the Columbia Law Review. It appears with a F...
Postmodem Legal Movements does two things. First, the bulk of the book provides an overview of Ameri...
It is probably an understatement to say that our profession has had its fair quota of smugness. Yet ...
The hypothesis of continuity has now been ably tested and challenged by William E. Nelson\u27s fine ...
Laura Kalman\u27s monograph, originally a dissertation, is nevertheless a fresh and rather engaging ...
IN the maze of currents and cross-currents that characterize contemporarywriting on jurisprudence an...
Law exists in primitive societies, and its study has value for civilized peoples. Its paramount valu...
This book contains seven chapters discussing the following as possible sources of law: the Sovereign...
This Book Review examines Law School: Legal Education in America from the 1850s to the 1980s, by Rob...
According to the jacket-blurb which accompanies the book: Thissearching interpretation, which conne...
Book review of: One case at a time: judicial minimalism on the Supreme Court. By Cass R. Sunstein. H...
The title of this brilliant little volume might, more accurately, have been, The Spirits of the Com...
Benjamin Barton and Stephanos Bibas’s new book, Rebooting Justice: More Technology, Fewer Lawyers, a...
This fine book amplifies and applies the pragmatic theories which Posner—a founder of the law and ec...
This is one of the last of the notable Continental Legal History Series of which eight volumes have ...
This is a reprint of an article from a recent issue of the Columbia Law Review. It appears with a F...