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E-raamat: Research Handbook on Modern Legal Realism

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This insightful Research Handbook provides a definitive overview of the New Legal Realism (NLR) movement, reaching beyond historical and national boundaries to form new conversations. Drawing on deep roots within the law-and-society tradition, it demonstrates the powerful virtues of new legal realist research and its attention to the challenges of translation between social science and law.

Highlighting a contrast with the current Empirical Legal Studies movement, chapters employ a variety of theoretically grounded methods to understand law and address legal problems. They explore an impressive range of contemporary issues including immigration, policing, globalization, legal education, and access to justice, concluding with an examination of how different social science disciplines intersect with NLR.

Incorporating global perspectives, the Research Handbook on Modern Legal Realism will be a key resource for scholars and students of legal theory and sociolegal studies. Illuminating the best approaches for combining social science considerations with expert perspectives on legal doctrines, it will also be of interest to practitioners and policy makers working in fields such as criminal and family law.

Arvustused

'This splendid volume displays a wide range of methodologically diverse, theoretically rich, and empirically grounded scholarship that thrives in the ''big tent'' of the new legal realism intellectual enterprise. The chapters creatively draw on both disciplinary and interdisciplinary social science frameworks to demonstrate the power and meaning of law in action throughout multiple social, economic, and political contexts around the globe. The book is a major achievement. Highly recommended for scholars and teachers of law!' -- Michael McCann, University of Washington, US 'In every way imaginable this volume is superb. It picks up where the Old Legal Realism left off, and shows what the New Legal Realism has to offer. Its contributors are a who's who in their fields. Their well-written chapters are packed with insights. The book will serve a diverse audience. As a whole, the volume will force everyone who looks at it to place their interests in broad context. It is a stunning achievement.' -- Malcolm M. Feeley, University of California, Berkeley, US This exciting Research Handbook is an essential resource on the New Legal Realism (NLR), which developed a distinctive genre of empirical research of law. The Research Handbook powerfully exemplifies NLRs integrative strategy, which deploys mixed methods (qualitative and quantitative as well as observational and experimental) and is attentive to the challenge of translation between social science and law. Covering a wide range of timely topics, this rich Research Handbook provides valuable insights on legal institutions and the individuals and organizations that encounter law. -- Hanoch Dagan, Tel Aviv University, Israel

List of figures
x
List of tables
xi
List of boxes
xii
List of contributors
xiii
1 Introduction to the Research Handbook on Modern Legal Realism
1(20)
Shauhin Talesh
Elizabeth Mertz
Heinz Klug
PART I VARIETIES OF LEGAL REALISM - THEN AND NOW
2 Realism then and now: Using the real world to inform formal law
21(15)
Elizabeth Mertz
Marc Galanter)
3 East Coast Legal Realism and its progeny
36(13)
Laura Kalman
4 From the periphery to the center and back? A brief history of Midwest Legal Realism
49(18)
Paul Baumgardner
Ajay K. Mehrotra
5 European New Legal Realism: Towards a basic science of law
67(15)
Jakob v.H. Holtermann
Mikael Rask Madsen
6 Lessons for new Legal Realism from Africa and Latin America
82(18)
Alexandra Huneeus
Heinz Klug
PART II LEGAL REALIST SCHOLARSHIP MEETS CURRENT DILEMMAS
SECTION A POLICING
7 Police violence in Sao Paulo: Between the asphalt and the hill
100(12)
Sebastian Sclofsky
8 Police torture: A case for interdisciplinarity
112(12)
Nick Cheesman
9 A Legal Realist approach to black-on-black policing
124(24)
Devon W. Carbado
L. Song Richardson
SECTION B IMMIGRATION
10 Transgressing boundaries through new Legal Realist approaches: Affinity and collaboration within ethnographic research on immigration law and policy
148(13)
Susan Bibler Coutin
11 Enacting immigration politics in a juridical register
161(15)
Leila Kawar
Jonathan Miaz
12 Critical legal rhetoric takes on immigration and refugee law
176(15)
Sara L. McKinnon
SECTION C LEGAL EDUCATION
13 New Legal Realism goes to law school: Integrating social science and law through legal education
191(17)
Emily Taylor Poppe
14 Teaching an interdisciplinary law class
208(15)
Marsha Mansfield
Elizabeth Mertz
15 Ambition and reality: Reforms of legal studies at the Faculty of Law at the University of Copenhagen
223(17)
Louise Victoria Johansen
Anne Lise Kjcer
16 New Legal Realism, eCRT, and the future of legal education scholarship
240(23)
Meera E. Deo
SECTION D INTERNATIONAL LAW AND GLOBAL STANDARDS
17 The uses and abuses of global social indicators
263(14)
David Nelken
Mathias Siems
18 "The life of the law has not been logic; it has been experience": International legal ethnography and the New Legal Realism
277(18)
Jens Meierhenrich
Richard Ashby Wilson
19 The judicialization of politics?
295(15)
Heinz Klug
SECTION E ACCESSING JUSTICE THROUGH LAW
20 A realist perspective on legal strategy in (the) practice
310(14)
Liora Israel
21 Access to justice
324(12)
Rebecca L. Sandefur
22 Planet of the insurers: How insurers shape and influence law and impact access to justice
336(18)
Shauhin Talesh
23 Rendering rural property visible to law: A role for New Legal Realism
354(22)
Thomas W. Mitchell
24 Urban property and housing rights in the time of the coronavirus
376(18)
Lisa T. Alexander
PART III DISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES
25 Anthropology
394(19)
Riaz Tejani
26 Sociology of Law and New Legal Realism
413(19)
Calvin Morrill
Lauren B. Edelman
27 The pitfalls and promises of a New Legal Realism rooted in political science
432(14)
Jeb Barnes
28 Psychology and Legal Realism
446(18)
Tom R. Tyler
29 User's guide to history
464(15)
Sarah A. Seo
30 Jurisprudence and legal theory
479(11)
Brian H. Bix
31 Law as a discipline: Legal theory, interdisciplinary legal theory, and ways of speaking legitimacy to power
490(14)
Bryant G. Garth
Index 504
Edited by Shauhin Talesh, Professor of Law and Professor of Sociology and Criminology, Law and Society, University of California, Irvine, Elizabeth Mertz, Research Professor, American Bar Foundation and John and Rylla Bosshard Professor of Law Emerita, University of Wisconsin and Heinz Klug, Evjue-Bascom Professor of Law, University of Wisconsin Law School, US and Visiting Professor, School of Law, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa