Legal Realism and Twentieth-century American Jurisprudence: The Changing Consensus |
Contents
The Consensus | 3 |
Early Realists and | 11 |
Sociological Jurisprudence | 29 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accepted adjudication American jurisprudence American Law American Legal Realism American legal theory argued asserted behavior Bickel Bingham Bork Cahill Cambridge Cardozo century challenge Columbia Law Review Common Law concepts concerned conclusion Constitution contemporary American Critical Legal Studies critique declaratory theory Democratic Theory doctrine Edward White Fuller Hart's Harvard Law Review Harvard University Press higher law Holmes's Ibid important intellectual interpretation Jerome Frank judges judicial activism judicial decisions judicial function Judicial Legislation judicial process judicial review judiciary Justice Holmes Karl Llewellyn Kurland Law School lawyers legal education legal formalism legal philosophy legal positivism legal rules legal scholars legal system legitimacy logic moral political positivism practical pragmatic principles process jurisprudence progressive Purcell radical realist movement rejected role Roscoe Pound social sociological jurisprudence study of law Supreme Court theorists theory of judicial thought tion traditional American traditional legal understanding values Warren Court Wechsler Yale Law Journal York