Jurisprudence
Jurisprudence
Jurisprudence
Schools of Jurisprudence
Formalism vs. Realism
Apart from different types of jurisprudence, different schools of
jurisprudence exist. Formalism, or conceptualism, treats law like math or
science. Formalists believe that a judge identifies the relevant legal
principles, applies them to the facts of a case, and logically deduces a rule
that will govern the outcome of the dispute. In contrast, proponents of legal
realism believe that most cases before courts present hard questions that
judges must resolve by balancing the interests of the parties and ultimately
drawing an arbitrary line on one side of the dispute. This line, realists
maintain, is drawn according to the political, economic, and psychological
inclinations of the judge. Some legal realists even believe that a judge is
able to shape the outcome of the case based on personal biases.
Positivists v. Naturalists
Apart from the realist-formalist dichotomy, there is the classic debate over
the appropriate sources of law between positivist and natural law schools of
thought. Positivists argue that there is no connection between law and
morality and the the only sources of law are rules that have been expressly
enacted by a governmental entity or court of law. Naturalists, or proponents
of natural law, insist that the rules enacted by government are not the only
sources of law. They argue that moral philosophy, religion, human reason
and individual conscience are also integrate parts of the law.
Some have attempted to break down schools of positivism and naturalism
(aka: anti-positivism) into 3 distinct groups:
The above mentioned schools of legal thoughts are only part of a diverse
jurisprudential picture of the United States. Other prominent schools of legal
thought exist. These include but are not limited to:
Overview
Critical legal studies (CLS) is a theory which states that the law is necessarily intertwined with
social issues, particularly stating that the law has inherent social biases. Proponents of
CLS believe that the law supports the interests of those who create the law. As such, CLS states
that the law supports a power dynamic which favors the historically privileged and disadvantages
the historically underprivileged. CLS finds that the wealthy and the powerful use the law as an
instrument for oppression in order to maintain their place in hierarchy. Many in the CLS
movement want to overturn the hierarchical structures of modern society and they focus on the
law as a tool in achieving this goal. S
History
CLS was officially started in 1977 at the conference at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, but
its roots extend earlier to when many of its founding members participated in social activism
surrounding the Civil Rights movement and the Vietnam War. The founders of CLS borrowed
from non-legal fields such as social theory, political philosophy, economics, and literary theory.
Among noted CLS theorists are Roberto Mangabeira Unger, Robert W. Gordon, and Duncan
Kennedy.
Influences
Although CLS has been largely contained within the United States, it was influenced to a great
extent by European philosophers, such as Karl Marx, Max Weber, Max Horkheimer, Antonio
Gramsci, and Michel Foucault. CLS has borrowed heavily from Legal Realism, the school of
legal thought that flourished in the 1920s and 1930s. Like CLS scholars, legal realists rebelled
against accepted legal theories of the day and urged the legal field to pay more attention to the
social context of the law.
Subgroups
CLS includes several subgroups with fundamentally different, even contradictory,
views. Feminist legal theory examines the role of gender in the law. Critical race theory
(CRT) examines the role of race in the law. Postmodernism is a critique of the law influenced by
developments in literary theory, and it emphasizes political economy and the economic context
of legal decisions and issues.
Further Reading
For more on critical legal studies, see this University of Minnesota Journal of Theory and
Practice article, this Harvard Law Review article, and this University of Pennsylvania Faculty
Scholarship article.
2. feminist jurisprudence,
Further Reading
More more on jurisprudence, see this Yale Law Journal Article, Washington
University Jurisprudence Review, and this Michigan Law Article.
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