• 由于资源中心转移的缘故,目前有很多条目所属分类并不正确。所以大家查找内容的时候,最好使用资源中心的搜索功能。如果你发现明显的归类错误,也可以任何形式予以反馈,我们会及时予以纠正。
作为手段服务于某种目的的法律:对法治的威胁

【英语】 作为手段服务于某种目的的法律:对法治的威胁 2008-11-06

无下载权限
书名: Law as a Means to an End: Threat to the Rule of Law (Law in Context)
作者: Brian Z. Tamanaha (Author)
出版社: Cambridge University Press; 1 edition (October 2, 2006)
语言: English
ISBN-10: 0521869528
ISBN-13: 978-0521869522

Book Description
The contemporary U.S. legal culture is marked by ubiquitous battles among various groups attempting to seize control of the law and wield it against others in pursuit of their particular agenda. This battle takes place in administrative, legislative, and judicial arenas at both the state and federal levels. This book identifies the underlying source of these battles in the spread of the instrumental view of law - the idea that law is purely a means to an end - in a context of sharp disagreement over the social good. It traces the rise of the instrumental view of law in the course of the past two centuries, then demonstrates the pervasiveness of this view of law and its implications within the contemporary legal culture, and ends by showing the various ways in which seeing law in purely instrumental terms threatens to corrode the rule of law.

Review
' ... an excellent treatment of a substantively interesting phenomenon, with real world implications. it is written in a lively, lucid manner, filled with fascinating titbits of information about its subject matter ... an outstanding treatment of an important scholarly question with profound normative implications for American society.' Law and Politics Review ' ... at once a high-paced historical thriller and a clamorous critique of contemporary US legal culture ... Tamanaha is an energetic travel companion. We should be grateful for his political sensitivity and his willingness to trawl through what he sees as a kind of Dante's Hell.' -- The Cambridge Law Journal

"Brian Tamanaha's Law as a Means to an End is something very rare--a book that has the potential to change thinking about the law in fundamental ways. The book accomplishes three substantial tasks with admirable brevity, erudition, and clarity. First, it traces the history of 'legal instrumentalism' in Nineteenth and Twentieth century jurisprudence and legal practice--a compelling story that illuminates the origins of our most basic assumptions about law. Second, it traces the pervasive influence of instrumentalist thinking in contemporary legal thought--acutely diagnosing the intellectual underpinnings of phenomena as diverse as 'cause lawyering' and the 'law and economics movement' in the legal academy. Third, it makes a compelling argument that the rise of instrumentalism has a fundamentally corrosive effect on the rule of law. This is not just an important book--it is THE important book of legal theory for this decade. Law as a Means to an End is superb." -- Lawrence Solum, John E. Cribbet Professor of Law, University of Illinois College of Law

"The great scholar Grant Gilmore once asked in the title of a fascinating book, 'Is Contract Dead?' and went on to answer, 'yes.' Brian Tamanaha does him one better. In this book he asks, 'Is Law Dead?' His answer: 'almost.' Law, he reports, is in danger of succumbing to instrumentalism and as such losing its vitality. Much of modern legal scholarship seeks to make law a branch of applied economics. This book pushes against that movement, as well as many other related “realist” movements. Whether one agrees or disagrees with Tamanaha, he or she will be wiser after having read this fine book." -- Malcolm M. Feeley, Claire Sanders Clements Dean's Professor, Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California at Berkeley

"Brian Tamanaha sounds a firebell in the night. He shows how the most progressive modern approaches to law, by undermining beliefs in its objectivity and formal rationality, and its rootedness in natural or customary standards of right conduct, have fatally undermined its claims to restrain power-seeking or serve the common good. Law is now seen simply as an instrument -- not as a limit on greed and power, but a means by which interests pursue their own selfish ends. And it's not only interest-groups and their lawyers, but judges and jurists, who have signed on to an instrumentalism that challenges the very ideas of the rule of law and the public interest. Tamanaha is not a nostalgic romantic. He does not think the old days can or should be recovered. He does not tell us what to do. But he illuminates our predicament with succinct history, clear-headed observation, and unflinchingly bleak analysis." -- Robert W. Gordon, Chancellor Kent Professor of Law and Legal History, Yale University

"Taken as a whole, Tamanaha's book makes a significant contribution to the scholarly understanding of the rule of law in American jurisprudence....Tamanaha's book provides a superb overview of the emergence of instrumentalism as the primary perspective on law in contemporary America. The evidence he marshals to support this conclusion is impressive, leaving little doubt as to the validity of his assertions...Law as a Means to an End is an outstanding treatment of an important scholarly question with profound normative implications for American society." -- Paul M. Collins, The Law and Politics Book Review

About the Author
Brian Z. Tamanaha is the Chief Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo Professor of Law at St. John's University School of Law. He delivered the inaugural Montesquieu Lecture (2004) at the University of Tilburg. He is the author of On the Rule of Law (Cambridge 2004), Realistic Socio-Legal Theory (Oxford 1997), and A General Jurisprudence of Law and Society (Oxford 2001) which won the Herbert Jacob Book Prize in 2001. He has published many articles and is the Associate Editor of Law and Society Review.

[thread=17428]论坛相关讨论主题[/thread]
作者
teiler
下载
120
查看
558
文件扩展名
rar
文件大小
1.3 MB
首次发布
最后更新
评分
0.00 星 0 星

来自teiler的更多资源

顶部