The tapestry of the law : Scotland, legal culture, and legal theory
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The tapestry of the law : Scotland, legal culture, and legal theory
(Law and philosophy library, v. 26)
Kluwer Academic Publishers, c1997
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Note
Includes biliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Although its concern is jurisprudence, The Tapestry of the Law is intended to offer neither an original theory of or about law nor an account of other people's theories in textbook form. It is, rather, an attempt to approach the subject without following either of these conventions. The reasons are as follows. Those engaged in legal theory are prone to assert that one cannot properly understand the law unless one takes a jurisprudential approach - preferably their own - to it. Equally, those engaged in exposition of the law may counter that legal theory fails to pay adequate attention to actual law. There is at least some truth in these claims. Analyses, courses and textbooks on both sides do often seem to be produced without reference to the other. Yet such isolation is probably more apparent than real. Most, if not all, so-called "black letter" lawyers do operate on the basis of certain jurisprudential understandings, even if these are not articulated ones. In the frequently quoted words ofF C S Northrop: There are lawyers, judges and even law professors who tell us they have no legal philosophy.
Table of Contents
Introduction. I. Some Puzzles about the Nature of Law. II. Connecting Law and Society. III. A Constitutional Culture. IV. The Style of Scots Law. V. The Style of Scots Law Continued. VI. And so to Ideology. VII. Matters of Interpretation. VIII. Law in Whose Terms? IX. And What Kind of System? X. The Language of the Law. XI. Some Different Critiques. XII. The Role of Reason. XIII. Weaving the Threads. Index of Authors.
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