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Reconstructing American Legal Realism & Rethinking Private Law Theory (Hardcover)
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Reconstructing American Legal Realism & Rethinking Private Law Theory (Hardcover)
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In the myriad choices of interpretation judges face when confronted
with rules and cases, legal realists are concerned with how these
doctrinal materials carry over into judicial outcomes. What can
explain past judicial behavior and predict its future course? How
can law constrain judgments made by unelected judges? How can the
distinction between law and politics be maintained despite the
collapse of law's autonomy in its positivist rendition? In
Reconstructing American Legal Realism & Rethinking Private Law
Theory, Hanoch Dagan provides an innovative and useful
interpretation of legal realism. He revives the legal realists'
rich account of law as a growing institution accommodating three
sets of constitutive tensions-power and reason, science and craft,
and tradition and progress-and demonstrates how the major claims
attributed to legal realism fit into this conception of law. Dagan
seeks to rein in realist descendants who have become fixated on one
aspect of the big picture, and to dispel the misconceptions that
those gone astray represent the tradition accurately or that
realism is now merely a historical signpost. He draws upon the
realist texts of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Karl Llewellyn, and others
to explain how legal realism offers important and unique
jurisprudential insights that are not just a part of legal history,
but are also relevant and useful for a contemporary understanding
of legal theory. Building on this realist conception of law and
enriching its texture, Dagan addresses more particular
jurisprudential questions. He shows that the realist achievement in
capturing law's irreducible complexity is crucial to the
reinvigoration of legal theory as a distinct scholarly subject
matter, and is also inspiring for a host of other, more specific
theoretical topics, such as the rule of law, the autonomy and
taxonomy of private law, the relationships between rights and
remedies, and the pluralism and perfectionism that typify private
law.
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