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The lingering core of legal scholarship

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Susan Bartie*
Affiliation:
University of Adelaide, Australia

Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to consider how leading scholars are interpreting the role and status of the core tenets of legal scholarship in England and Australia – the tenets that have provided an element of unity in legal scholarship over the past century or so. Instead of focusing on the way that scholarship has diversified and expanded, the paper considers whether elements of the prior orthodoxy have remained: do the tenets persist, what status are they afforded and what impact will their presence have on the future identity of the discipline and its conception of law? The paper captures insights into the way that scholars – as opposed to administrators or managers – are interpreting changes in the discipline. It is based on the premise that scholarly attitudes can shape the discipline and that therefore such attitudes are worthy of study.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society of Legal Scholars 2010

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References

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5. To say this is not to ignore the significant influence that funding models adopted by university governance bodies have on the nature and direction of research. However, as argued more forcefully later in this paper, research audits do not completely stifle the ability of scholars to govern the discipline.

6. This is a common phrase used in studies of communication patterns in the sciences to describe the communicative relations within an institution.

7. Whiteley's study was limited to scientists.

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27. Legal history and jurisprudence (in some forms) are exceptions to this.

28. Specific examples are given in the final part of this paper.

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41. Hyland, above n 16, pp 104 and 106.

42. Ibid, p 104 (emphasis added).

43. A review of early book reviews in law journals clearly evidences this fact.

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46. See, eg, Chesterman and Weisbrot, above n 3, at 714.

47. See, eg, the attitudes expressed in Fleming's review of the fifteenth edition of Pollock's Law of Torts published in the Sydney Law Review: (1953) 1 SLR 282.

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55. Ibid.

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58. Ibid, at 218–220.

59. Cownie, above n 32, p 54.

60. Ibid, p 54.

61. Ibid, p 58.

62. This characterisation has proven influential. Eg, Vick writes with reference to Cownie's work that ‘it is unlikely that most academic lawyers today would consider themselves “pure” doctrinal researchers’: Vick above n 15, at 181.

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70. Siems, ibid, at 153.

71. Duxbury ‘When we were young’, above n 20, at 488. These ideas are developed further in Duxbury Frederick Pollock, above n 20.

72. Twining, above n 1, pp 130–141.

73. Ibid.

74. Vick, above n 15, at 179.

75. See Duxbury, N Jurists and Judges: An Essay on Influence (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2001) pp 61117.Google Scholar

76. Braun, A Professors and judges in Italy: it takes two to tango’ (2006) 26 OJLS 665 at 665.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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78. See Keyes, M and Johnstone, R Changing legal education: rhetoric, reality, and prospects for the future’ (2004) 26 SLR 538 at 542 and 556.Google Scholar

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80. See, eg, Brown, W Jethro Law schools and the legal profession’ (1908) 6 Comm LR 3 at 8;Google ScholarDunbar, above n 11.

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84. The Pearce Report, above n 48, p 105, quoting and adopting the views form the Michelman Committee Report.

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92. J Goldring's unpublished work is quoted in Barker, above n 37, at 446.

93. See Justice Kirby ‘Welcome to law reviews’[2002] MULR 1.

94. For an open criticism of the way that judicial sentiment can serve to limit the horizon of legal scholarship, see J Gava ‘Law reviews: good for judges, bad for law schools?’[2002] MULR 560.

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97. See, eg, K Shatwell ‘Some problems of post-war legal education’[1948] ALJ 17; D Derham ‘Legal education – university education and professional training’[1962] ALJ 209.

98. Cramton, R Demystifying legal scholarship’ (1986) 75 Geo LJ 1 at 1.Google Scholar

99. Rhode has forcefully made this point: Rhode, D Legal scholarship’ (2002) 115 Harv LR 1327 at 1327.CrossRefGoogle ScholarSeveral other scholars have quoted Rhode's work for the proposition that writing meta-scholarship is a risky practice. See, eg, Siems, above n 69, at 148.

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103. Ibid, at 46–50.

104. Bollinger, above n 81, at 2167.

105. Ibid, at 2168.

106. Post, RLegal scholarship and the practice of law’ (1992) 63 U Colo L Rev 615 at 621Google Scholar agreeing with the position taken by Schlegel, JA certain narcissism; a slight unseemliness’ (1992) 63 U Colo L Rev 595 at 607.Google Scholar

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108. Ibid, at 2032.

109. Eg, Yen advises the beginning scholar to write something other than work for the profession: Yen, A Advice for the beginning legal scholar’ (1992) 38 Lloyds Law Review 95 at 97.Google Scholar

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113. Ibid, at 497.

114. Feldman writes that ‘On the academic side, an increasing number of contemporary legal scholars no longer write with the explicit or even implicit hope of influencing the direction or reform of the law, either in courts or in legislatures’: ibid, at 488–489. He cites the following scholars as evidencing this tendency: Hamburger, P Separation of Church and State (Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press, 2002)Google Scholar; Shiffrin, S Dissent, Injustice and the Meanings of America (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1999)Google Scholar; Feldman, S Please Don't Wish Me a Merry Christmas: A Critical History of the Separation of Church and State (New York: New York University Press, 1997)Google Scholar; Compus, PThe obscure object of desire: hermeneutics and the autonomous legal text’ (1993) 77 Minn LR 1065 at 1094–1095;Google Scholar Fish, SDennis Martinez and the uses of theory’ (1987) 96 Yale LJ 1773;CrossRefGoogle Scholar Schlag, PNormative and nowhere to to’ (1990) 43 Stan LR 167.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

115. Feldman, above n 112, at 491–492.

116. Ibid, at 496.

117. Ibid, at 491–492.

118. This is a position taken by many critical legal studies scholars.

119. Madison, M The idea of the law review: scholarship, prestige and open access’ (2006) 10 Lewis and Clark Law Review 901 at 906.Google ScholarMadison quotes Getman, J In the Company of Scholars: The Struggle for the Soul of Higher Education (Texas: University of Texas Press, 1992) p 43 Google Scholar: ‘Research.…clothes with respectability the attitudes that the academic enterprise is more important, demanding, and complex than other endeavours and that first-rate academics are different, smarter, and more creative than other people’.

120. See Fish, S There is No Such Thing as Free Speech and it's a Good Thing Too (Oxford: Oxford University Press 1994) pp 273279;Google Scholar Bergin, T The law teacher: a man divided against himself’ (1968) 54 Va L Rev 637 at 641;CrossRefGoogle ScholarPost, above n 104.

121. See Shapiro, FThe most-cited law review articles’ (1985) 73 Calif L Rev 1540;CrossRefGoogle Scholar Shapiro, FThe most-cited law review articles revisited’ (1996) 71 Chi-Kent L Rev 751;Google Scholar Shapiro, FThe most cited legal scholars’ (2000) 29 JLS 409;CrossRefGoogle Scholar Shapiro, FThe most cited legal books’ (2000) 29 JLS 397;CrossRefGoogle Scholar Shapiro, FThe most cited law reviews’ (2000) 29 JLS 389;CrossRefGoogle Scholar(1996) 71 Chi-Kent L Rev 781, and discussion in Bartie, above n 99, at 730.

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126. See Edwards, Judge Harry Reflections (on law review, legal education, law practice, and my alma mater)’ (2003) 100 Mich LR 1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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130. For a dialogue between scholars concerning how a book was intended to engage with the judiciary, see Bigwood, RAuthor's response to the commentators’ (2007) 32 AJLP 161 at 164.Google ScholarBigwood addresses the critique of his work by Gava: Gava, JThe audience for Rick Bigwood's Exploitative Contracts ’ (2007) 32 AJLP 140.Google ScholarGava considered that Bigwood's work was based on the implicit premise that judges would be able to follow and incorporate ideas contained within the work, whereas Bigwood clarified that he had not envisaged a direct transfer of ideas.

131. Cownie, F and Bradney, A Gothic horror? a response to Margaret Thornton’ (2005) 14(2) S & LS 277 at 280.Google Scholar

132. Ibid, at 277–278 (emphasis added).

133. Ibid, at 280, quoting from Thomson, A Critical approaches to law: who needs legal theory?’ in Grigg-Spall, I and Ireland, P (eds) The Critical Lawyers' Handbook (London: Pluto Press, 1997) pp 210 Google Scholar and A Bradney ‘Benchmarking: a pedagogically valuable process? An alternative view’ (1999) Web JCLI 6 at 430–443; and Cownie, above n 32, pp 133–141.

134. For a discussion of the role of the Society of Legal Scholars and various conferences and journals, see Cownie, F and Cocks, R A Great and Noble Occupation! (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2009) pp 137141 and 183–186.Google ScholarThe Socio-Legal Studies Association was formed in 1990 to promote and encourage the work of socio-legal academics.

135. Eg, the Griffith Law Review, established in 1992, has, since 1996, encouraged the publication of interdisciplinary, social and critical legal research.