Academy Fellows Reflect On A Century of Legal Change
"Looking
Back at Law's Century," recently published by Cornell University Press,
describes the complex interaction of democracy, capitalism, and legal change in
the twentieth century. "The last hundred years - what we might in retrospect
characterize as 'law's century' - took us from the Progessive Era's optimism
about law and social engineering to current concerns about our hyper-legalistic
society, from Wilsonian idealism to the worldwide spread of democracy, the rule
of law, and the idea of human rights," according to the volume's editors, Austin
Sarat, Bryant Garth, and American Academy Fellow Robert A. Kagan.
Other Academy Fellows who contributed to the book include Owen Fiss, Morton
Keller, and Martha Minow.
The American Academy of Arts and Sciences cosponsored the
work that led to the publication of "Looking Back at Law's Century." The
new study emphasizes the double role of law in responding to, and initiating,
social change. Representing a variety of perspectives, the authors examine how
law has been shaped, and in turn, has structured two "extralegal developments:" the
spread of democratic political processes across the world and the emergence of
more productive and competitive capitalist economies. Among the topics covered
in the publication are race and citizenship, individual and group identity,
crime and punishment, the legal profession, democracy and freedom, the liberal
state, corporate governance, civil society, and the teaching of law.
The study was one of a number of projects within the American
Academy's Social Policy and Education program. Since World War II, this
Academy program area has initiated and sponsored pioneering works on poverty,
race relations, ethnicity, immigration, and education. Current studies focus on
legal issues in this country, the relationship between the legislative and
judiciary branches, and education at all levels - from primary schools through
graduate institutions - here and abroad. Projects are designed to advance the
state of scholarship and develop innovative solutions to critical social
problems. For more information on the Social Policy and Education program,
click here.
Contributors to "Looking Back at Law's Century":
Guyora Binder, SUNY-Buffalo
Marianne Constable, University of California, Berkeley
Owen Fiss, Yale Law School
Bryant Garth, American Bar Foundation
Robert W. Gordon, Yale Law School
Carol Greenhouse, Indiana University
Robert A. Kagan, University of California, Berkeley
Laura Kalman, University of California, Santa Barbara
Morton Keller, Brandeis University
David Kennedy, Harvard Law School
Martha Minow, Harvard Law School
William J. Novak, University of Chicago
Austin Sarat, Amherst College
Jonathan Simon, University of Miami
Kendall Thomas, Columbia Law School
For more on "Looking Back at Law's Century," including
ordering information, please call 1-800-666-2211 or visit:
http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu.
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