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The Law as it Could Be Owen Fiss

The Law as it Could Be By Owen Fiss

The Law as it Could Be by Owen Fiss


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Summary

The Law As It Could Be gathers Fiss's most important work on procedure, adjudication and public reason, introduced by the author and including contextual introductions for each piece - some of which are among the most cited in 20th Century American legal studies.

The Law as it Could Be Summary

The Law as it Could Be by Owen Fiss

The Law As It Could Be gathers Fiss's most important work on procedure, adjudication and public reason, introduced by the author and including contextual introductions for each piece-some of which are among the most cited in Twentieth Century legal studies. Fiss surveys the legal terrain between the landmark cases of Brown v. Board of Education and Bush v. Gore to reclaim the legal legacy of the Civil Rights Movement. He argues forcefully for a vision of judges as instruments of public reason and of the courts as a means of shaping society in the image of the Constitution.
In building his argument, Fiss attends to topics as diverse as the use of the injunction to restructure social institutions; how law and economics have misunderstood the role of the judge; why the movement seeking alternatives to adjudication fails to serve the public interest; and why Bush v. Gore was not the constitutional crisis some would have us believe. In so doing, Fiss reveals a vision of adjudication that vindicates the public reason on which Brown v. Board of Education was founded.

The Law as it Could Be Reviews

Refreshingly straightforward. Fiss writes in the style of John Marshall, sweeping the reader along with vigorous argumentation. * The Law and Politics Book Review *
An uplifting book. * Choice *
Owen Fiss is the moral compass of legal liberalism, and these indispensable essays are hisand ourguide to true north. Against the reaction of the Rehnquist Court and academic fashions for economics, Marxism, and emotionalism, Fiss calmly makes the case for unvarnished reason as the only and best guide to law and life. The book's brilliant, pathbreaking meditations on the structure of legal institutions reveal a profound faith that law can be not only the instrument of justice, but can actually embody justice itself. Fisss unswerving commitment to the possibilities of reason, justice, and law is more than timelyit is essential to the very project of the law. -- Noah Feldman,author of After Jihad: America and the Struggle for Islamic Democracy

About Owen Fiss

Owen Fiss is Sterling Profesor of Law, Yale Law School. Among his books are Liberalism Divided and The Irony of Free Speech.

Table of Contents

ContentsPreface 1 The Forms of Justice2 The Social and Political Foundations of Adjudication3 The Right Degree of Independence 4 The Bureaucratization of the Judiciary5 Against Settlement 6 The Allure of Individualism 7 The Political Theory of the Class Action 8 The Awkwardness of the Criminal Law 9 Objectivity and Interpretation 10 Judging as a Practice 11 The Death of Law? 12 Reason vs. Passion 13 The Irrepressibility of Reason 14 Bush v. Gore and the Question of Legitimacy Afterword Notes Index Acknowledgments About the Author

Additional information

NLS9780814727263
9780814727263
0814727263
The Law as it Could Be by Owen Fiss
New
Paperback
New York University Press
2003-10-01
287
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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