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The Decline of Natural Law - How American Lawyers Once Used Natural Law and Why They Stopped (Hardcover)
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The Decline of Natural Law - How American Lawyers Once Used Natural Law and Why They Stopped (Hardcover)
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An account of a fundamental change in American legal thought, from
a conception of law as something found in nature to one in which
law is entirely a human creation. Before the late 19th century,
natural law played an important role in the American legal system.
Lawyers routinely used it in their arguments and judges often
relied upon it in their opinions. Today, by contrast, natural law
plays virtually no role in the legal system. When natural law was
part of a lawyer's toolkit, lawyers thought of judges as finders of
the law, but when natural law dropped out of the legal system,
lawyers began thinking of judges as makers of the law instead. In
The Decline of Natural Law, the eminent legal historian Stuart
Banner explores the causes and consequences of this change. To do
this, Banner discusses the ways in which lawyers used natural law
and why the concept seemed reasonable to them. He further examines
several long-term trends in legal thought that weakened the
position of natural law, including the use of written
constitutions, the gradual separation of the spheres of law and
religion, the rapid growth of legal publishing, and the position of
natural law in some of the 19th century's most contested legal
issues. And finally, he describes both the profession's rejection
of natural law in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and the
ways in which the legal system responded to the absence of natural
law. The first book to explain how natural law once worked in the
American legal system, The Decline of Natural Law offers a unique
look into how and why this major shift in legal thought happened,
and focuses, in particular, on the shift from the idea that law is
something we find to something we make.
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