Synthetic Readings of Roscoe Pound's Jurisprudence
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Mitchel de S.-O.- l'E. Lasser
In this Article, Professor Lasser offers two distinct readings of Pound's comparative work. In the first, "generous" reading, he argues that the work of Roscoe Pound might well possess significant current potential for the discipline of American comparative law. As his famous exchange with Karl Llewellyn made abundantly clear, Pound was no friend of American legal realism. Given the prevalence of post-Realist perspectives in the American discipline of comparative law, Pound's work might offer an alternative methodology to that which has dominated American comparative law for at least the last thirty years. In particular, his work might offer a model of how to escape the typical American post-Realist prism which tends, almost as a matter of first principle, to define law in the Holmes/Llewellyn manner as "what the courts do in fact." Pound's comparative work, in other words, may offer a methodological alternative to American comparative law's tendency to approach law in a judge-centered manner, a tendency that obliterates the locus of the most basic differences between American and Continental European legal ideologies. In his second, "severe" reading, Professor Lasser argues that Pound's comparative analyses nonetheless fall into most of the pitfalls that Pound had himself identified and warned against. Faced with these two readings, Professor Lasser concludes that Pound's simultaneously promising and disappointing forms of comparativism should not be reconciled.*This is a draft submitted for advice and comments by my peers. It is not the final version of the article. Please send comments by e-mail to "lasserm@law.utah.edu".
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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- Reflections on "The Common Core of European Private Law" Project
- Synthetic Readings of Roscoe Pound's Jurisprudence
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- Property Transferred in Breach of Trust
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- On Good Faith and Insurance: A Comparative Study of Judicial Activism in the World's Largest Democracy.
- Topics Article
- An Introduction to the Law of Contracts in Italy
- Globalization and Cross-Border Litigation
- An Introduction to Greek Contract Law
- The Evolution and Integration of Different Legal Systems in the Horn of Africa: the Case of Somaliland
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Articles in the same Issue
- Frontiers Article
- "All of this and so much more": Original Intent, Antagonism and Non-Interpretivism
- Reflections on "The Common Core of European Private Law" Project
- Synthetic Readings of Roscoe Pound's Jurisprudence
- The Principles Of European Contract Law: Some Choices Made By The Lando Commission
- Basic Issues of Private Law Codification in Europe: Trust
- Advances Article
- The Good Faith Principle in Contract Law and the Precontractual Duty to Disclose: Comparative Analysis of New Differences in Legal Cultures
- Comparative Personal Property: The Case of Shares
- Property Transferred in Breach of Trust
- Legal Change and Economic Performance
- On Good Faith and Insurance: A Comparative Study of Judicial Activism in the World's Largest Democracy.
- Topics Article
- An Introduction to the Law of Contracts in Italy
- Globalization and Cross-Border Litigation
- An Introduction to Greek Contract Law
- The Evolution and Integration of Different Legal Systems in the Horn of Africa: the Case of Somaliland
- Securitisation and Bankruptcy in Indonesia: Theme and Variations