Sociology of Law

Front Cover
Transaction Publishers, 2001 - Law - 314 pages

Georges Gurvitch occupies an interesting position in the development of the sociology of law. In the period immediately preceding its quantitative expansion, he produced an explicitly conceived systematic theoretical intervention. What is particularly significant about Gurvitch's Sociology of Law at first appears as a contradiction. His work has had very little lasting impact on developments within the field of the sociology of law. At best, his existence is occasionally footnoted, but he engendered no great controversy or debate, nor does he have any active contemporary "disciples." Despite this lack of attention, Gurvitch work provides a concentrated expression of the theoretical problems that beset the field.

The core of Gurvitch's sociology of law is at root a continuation of the efforts, apparent in the work of Max Weber, to resolve or integrate the dualism which is so markedly affecting law. It is the apparent dualism between law as a positive institution resting upon a framework of social power, while at the same time being a system of values or norms having some compelling internal strength and validity. Gurvitch's Sociology of Law shines as a beacon in the ongoing quest for a transformative vision of law. The new introduction by Alan Hunt discusses Gurvitch's place in the history of the sociology of law and the context in which his works should be placed. It also features a brief biography of the sociologist as well as a discussion of the central features of Gurvitch's sociology. This book will be of interest to students of sociology and law.

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About the author (2001)

Georges Gurvitch (1894-1965) held the chair of sociology at the Sorbonne from 1949 until his death. During the war years, he taught at the New School for Social Research. He was the author of numerous works in the sociology of law including Le Temps Present et l'Idue du Droit Social, L'Experience Juridique et la Philosophe Pluraliste do Droit, and The Bill of Social Rights.

Alan Hunt is professor in the departments of sociology and of law at Carleton University in Ottawa having previously taught in England. He is the author of Governing Morals: A Social History of Moral Regulation, Governance of the Consuming Passions: A History of Sumptuary Regulation, Foucault and Law (with Gary Wickham), Explorations in Law and Society, Reading Dworkin Critically, Marx and Engels on Law (with Maureen Cain), and The Sociological Movement in Law.

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