1st Edition

Pragmatism and Law From Philosophy to Dispute Resolution

By Michal Alberstein Copyright 2002
    376 Pages
    by Routledge

    376 Pages
    by Routledge

    Pragmatism and Law provides a textual reading of the American legal discourse, as it unfolds through various genres of pragmatism, which evolve and transform during the twentieth century. The historical narrative, which the book weaves, traces the transformation of the pragmatic idea from the forefront of philosophical intellectual inquiries at the turn of the twentieth century to a common sense lawyers’ practical rule of action at the turn of the twenty-first century. During this sequence, a fresh look at American history and legal history in particular is offered through the emphasis on recurring discursive structures which assume incommensurable treatments of basic liberal notions like justice, politics, and truth. Underlying the writing is an interpretative mode of inquiry, based on European post-structural methodologies, while claiming to represent their next intellectual phase. This contemporary mode of inquiry is that of a reading which insists on healing through the paradoxes. It is the same mode that sets, in the author’s view, the updated interpretative model of dispute resolution studies.

    Contents: The maturing of the pragmatic idea in law and society (or: the fall, and rise of philawsophy); Settled law and the law-is-not-but-ought-to-be: the pragmatic philosophy of dispute resolution (or: why couldn’t Henry Hart speak?); Taking sides: margins and phases of pragmatics of legal process disciplines (or: the pragmatists that we are); In search of the dispute: on lawyers and legal philawsophers at Harvard Law school (or: some private hope and public irony); From philawsophy to dispute-resolution (or: layers of mediation, and models of engagements in reality); Concluding notes; Bibliography; Index.

    Biography

    Michal Alberstein, Bar Ilan University, Israel