Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Law

A History Of Injunctions In England Before 1700, David W. Raack Oct 1986

A History Of Injunctions In England Before 1700, David W. Raack

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Dedication Ceremony For The School Of Law Addition And Renovation Invitation, September 12, 1986 Sep 1986

Dedication Ceremony For The School Of Law Addition And Renovation Invitation, September 12, 1986

Law School Building

No abstract provided.


Dedication Ceremony School Of Law Addition And Renovation Program, September 12, 1986 Sep 1986

Dedication Ceremony School Of Law Addition And Renovation Program, September 12, 1986

Law School Building

No abstract provided.


Economic Analysis Of Legal Institutions: Explaining An "Inexplicable" Rule Of Roman Law, David Locke Hall, F. Douglas Raymond Jul 1986

Economic Analysis Of Legal Institutions: Explaining An "Inexplicable" Rule Of Roman Law, David Locke Hall, F. Douglas Raymond

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


The Future Of Legal Scholarship And The Search For A Modern Theory Of Law, Donald H. Gjerdingen Jan 1986

The Future Of Legal Scholarship And The Search For A Modern Theory Of Law, Donald H. Gjerdingen

Articles by Maurer Faculty

In this Article, Professor Gjerdingen argues that the current crisis in legal scholarship can be traced to a change in the dominant concept of American law. He argues that virtually all of the significant schools of American legal thought during the last century, from Langdellian orthodoxy to realism to the legal process school, were dominated by a concept of law that separated law and politics. This concept of law, which he terms "conventionalism," presumed that law was an autonomous, apolitical discipline dominated by the study of adjudication and classical common law categories. In contrast, the new legal scholarship of the …