Law in Contemporary Society

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HowToBeARealist 6 - 28 Jan 2009 - Main.WalkerNewell
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This post is mostly about the interplay of social science and value judgments in Cohen's realistic judging. His description of the realistic judge can be found on page 842, but I think we can distill it down to the following simple instructions:
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 This makes more clear the link between Holmes-Cohen pragmatism and the law & economics school that dominates at least Contracts and Torts at CLS. The outcome that we are taught is 'desirable' always favors economic efficiency. Can we harness the decision-making process but put other goals in place? What would the goals be? How would we convince judges to value them?

-- AndrewCase - 28 Jan 2009

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This post is in response to Andrew's post above. Calabresi & Melamud also note societal norms of wealth distribution as potentially valuable in making functionally sound decisions in torts and property. I like this concept, and I think the courts can, if they choose, make significant changes to structural inequities which elevate some groups at the expense of others. Unfortunately for me, I doubt that most judges share my views about wealth distribution. In fact, as a group, I would assume that judges have a lot invested (intellectually and financially) in maintaining the status quo. This doesn't, however, explain a doctrinal development like enterprise liability, which has had significant distributional effects.

-- WalkerNewell - 28 Jan 2009

 
 
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Revision 6r6 - 28 Jan 2009 - 04:13:27 - WalkerNewell
Revision 5r5 - 28 Jan 2009 - 01:12:41 - AndrewCase
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