Much academic work continues to operate within the cramping and pervasive spirit of a black-letter mentality that encourages scholars and jurists to maintain legal study as an inward-looking and self-contained discipline. There is still a marked tendency to treat law as somehow a world of its own that is separate from the society within which it operates and purports to serve. This is a disheartening and disabling state of affairs. Accordingly, this article will offer both a critique of the present situation and suggest an alternative way of proceeding. The writer recommends a shift from philosophy to democracy so that legal academics will be less obsessed with abstraction and formalism and more concerned with relevance and practicality. In...
In the generation of law and society research that emerged with the formation of the Law and Society...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier Law schools in effect have been located on oneway streets...
Should legal academics begin to engage in a greater degree of empirical scholarship, I believe that ...
Much academic work continues to operate within the cramping and pervasive spirit of a black-letter m...
Very few academics today doubt that American legal scholarship is experiencing a crisis of identity....
It is hard to turn around nowadays without hearing about the malaise in legal scholarship. For examp...
This article begins with a discussion of the critique of methodology, a characterization of standard...
The apex of American legal thought is embodied in two types of writings: the federal appellate opini...
This article presents a tightly organized and closely reasoned analysis of legal scholarship in the ...
Arguably, the most important general development in legal scholarship over the past two decades has ...
This symposium has successfully convened a set of commentaries on, and criticisms of, modern legal s...
We should begin with a confession of ignorance. We have no jurisprudence of legal scholarship. Schol...
The invitation to reflect on changes in law and the humanities over the past decade provides an op...
Empirical Legal Studies promises a constructive coming together of empirical and doctrinal legal res...
One of the striking developments in academic law in the past half century is the reconception of law...
In the generation of law and society research that emerged with the formation of the Law and Society...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier Law schools in effect have been located on oneway streets...
Should legal academics begin to engage in a greater degree of empirical scholarship, I believe that ...
Much academic work continues to operate within the cramping and pervasive spirit of a black-letter m...
Very few academics today doubt that American legal scholarship is experiencing a crisis of identity....
It is hard to turn around nowadays without hearing about the malaise in legal scholarship. For examp...
This article begins with a discussion of the critique of methodology, a characterization of standard...
The apex of American legal thought is embodied in two types of writings: the federal appellate opini...
This article presents a tightly organized and closely reasoned analysis of legal scholarship in the ...
Arguably, the most important general development in legal scholarship over the past two decades has ...
This symposium has successfully convened a set of commentaries on, and criticisms of, modern legal s...
We should begin with a confession of ignorance. We have no jurisprudence of legal scholarship. Schol...
The invitation to reflect on changes in law and the humanities over the past decade provides an op...
Empirical Legal Studies promises a constructive coming together of empirical and doctrinal legal res...
One of the striking developments in academic law in the past half century is the reconception of law...
In the generation of law and society research that emerged with the formation of the Law and Society...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier Law schools in effect have been located on oneway streets...
Should legal academics begin to engage in a greater degree of empirical scholarship, I believe that ...