In this issue, the Osgoode Hall Law Journal presents a special symposium of review-essays on Allan Hutchinson\u27s book, It\u27s All in the Game: A Non-foundationalist Account of Law and Adjudication. A member of the faculty of Osgoode Hall Law School since 1978, Professor Hutchinson is well known internationally for his rich and provocative contributions to the literature of Critical Legal Studies. In numerous books, articles, and essays, he has challenged us to think harder about a wide span of issues in tort, constitutional law, jurisprudence,professional responsibility, judicial independence, law and post-modernism, and other fields. The review-essays that follow are written by three leading legal theorists from Canada (Richard Devlin),...
The appearance in permanent form of these five lectures, which were first published in the Fortnight...
The Province of Jurisprudence Democratized explores the implications of taking a vigorously democrat...
This symposium has successfully convened a set of commentaries on, and criticisms of, modern legal s...
In this issue, the Osgoode Hall Law Journal presents a special symposium of review-essays on Allan H...
Three questions concerning modern legal thought provide the framework for It\u27s All in the Game: W...
Allan Hutchinson remarks at the beginning of his interesting article that Gadamer\u27s writings have...
This essay reviews The Clinic and the Court (Ian Harper, Tobias Kelly, and Akshay Khanna eds., 2015)...
Some of my friends tell me that, as a general proposition, as men get older they become more conserv...
Law is best interpreted in the context of the traditions and cultures that have shaped its developme...
Patrick Glenn’s Legal Traditions of the World caused a considerable stir on its first appearance. T...
Professor James Allan and the Hon Michael Kirby AC CMG engaged in a public conversation on constitut...
In the beginning, there was law. Then came law-and. Law and society, law and economics, law and hist...
Book review of Cricket and the Law by David Fraser and published by The Institute of Criminology (Sy...
The core of the papers were delivered in the law panel at the interdisciplinary symposium "Moral Pan...
For more than a century, careful readers of the Green Bag have known that “[t]here is nothing sacred...
The appearance in permanent form of these five lectures, which were first published in the Fortnight...
The Province of Jurisprudence Democratized explores the implications of taking a vigorously democrat...
This symposium has successfully convened a set of commentaries on, and criticisms of, modern legal s...
In this issue, the Osgoode Hall Law Journal presents a special symposium of review-essays on Allan H...
Three questions concerning modern legal thought provide the framework for It\u27s All in the Game: W...
Allan Hutchinson remarks at the beginning of his interesting article that Gadamer\u27s writings have...
This essay reviews The Clinic and the Court (Ian Harper, Tobias Kelly, and Akshay Khanna eds., 2015)...
Some of my friends tell me that, as a general proposition, as men get older they become more conserv...
Law is best interpreted in the context of the traditions and cultures that have shaped its developme...
Patrick Glenn’s Legal Traditions of the World caused a considerable stir on its first appearance. T...
Professor James Allan and the Hon Michael Kirby AC CMG engaged in a public conversation on constitut...
In the beginning, there was law. Then came law-and. Law and society, law and economics, law and hist...
Book review of Cricket and the Law by David Fraser and published by The Institute of Criminology (Sy...
The core of the papers were delivered in the law panel at the interdisciplinary symposium "Moral Pan...
For more than a century, careful readers of the Green Bag have known that “[t]here is nothing sacred...
The appearance in permanent form of these five lectures, which were first published in the Fortnight...
The Province of Jurisprudence Democratized explores the implications of taking a vigorously democrat...
This symposium has successfully convened a set of commentaries on, and criticisms of, modern legal s...