After considering the side road of critical legal studies, I shall try to indicate the major signposts to a more complete jurisprudence. These signposts take the form of questions or anomalies in our present understanding of law. I will conclude that only by following these signposts, by exploring these questions and anomalies, will we begin to uncover the nature of law and justice
The study of law may be viewed as the critical analysis of a system of logically coherent rules gove...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier Law schools in effect have been located on oneway streets...
In this article, Professor Hall describes the ways in which he proceeded to construct a philosophy o...
After considering the side road of critical legal studies, I shall try to indicate the major signpos...
Jurisprudence is founded on the assumption that the foundations of legal knowledge are not fixed; ra...
Explores fundamental questions about law and justice from a philosophical and theoretical perspectiv...
This period is marked by rather more strenuous efforts than have been made before in this country, t...
Many of the current debates in jurisprudence focus on articulating the boundaries of law. In this es...
Of the various subjects of legal study, jurisprudence is the one in which the most momentous and pro...
Here in 25 chapters, 214 selections, and some 1200 pages of readings, designed primarily to be used ...
What is law like? What can we compare it with in order to illuminate its character and suggest answe...
If law as an activity emerged naively and unpremeditated, as a direction of attention pursued withou...
Professor Rodes defines Jurisprudence as \u27\u27the legal profession\u27s account of what it is abo...
Following the suggestion of our Chairman, we have apparently agreed to assume that under the theme o...
Jurisprudence is most usefully conceived as a theory about law, not as a theory of law. The distinct...
The study of law may be viewed as the critical analysis of a system of logically coherent rules gove...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier Law schools in effect have been located on oneway streets...
In this article, Professor Hall describes the ways in which he proceeded to construct a philosophy o...
After considering the side road of critical legal studies, I shall try to indicate the major signpos...
Jurisprudence is founded on the assumption that the foundations of legal knowledge are not fixed; ra...
Explores fundamental questions about law and justice from a philosophical and theoretical perspectiv...
This period is marked by rather more strenuous efforts than have been made before in this country, t...
Many of the current debates in jurisprudence focus on articulating the boundaries of law. In this es...
Of the various subjects of legal study, jurisprudence is the one in which the most momentous and pro...
Here in 25 chapters, 214 selections, and some 1200 pages of readings, designed primarily to be used ...
What is law like? What can we compare it with in order to illuminate its character and suggest answe...
If law as an activity emerged naively and unpremeditated, as a direction of attention pursued withou...
Professor Rodes defines Jurisprudence as \u27\u27the legal profession\u27s account of what it is abo...
Following the suggestion of our Chairman, we have apparently agreed to assume that under the theme o...
Jurisprudence is most usefully conceived as a theory about law, not as a theory of law. The distinct...
The study of law may be viewed as the critical analysis of a system of logically coherent rules gove...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier Law schools in effect have been located on oneway streets...
In this article, Professor Hall describes the ways in which he proceeded to construct a philosophy o...