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E-book

Title Law in the liberal arts / edited by Austin Sarat
Published Ithaca : Cornell University Press, 2004

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Description 1 online resource (viii, 202 pages)
Contents Defending liberal education from the law / Douglas J. Goodman and Susan S. Silbey -- The liberal arts, legal scholarship, and the democratic critique of judicial power / Keith J. Bybee -- On not leaving law to the lawyers / Marianne Constable -- Crossing boundaries : from disciplinary perspectives to an integrated conception of legal scholarship / Austin Sarat -- Meaning What You Say / James Boyd White -- Teaching civil liberties as a branch of political theory : tolerance versus respect / Jeffrey Abramson -- Romancing the quotation / Hendrik Hartog -- "Termes Queinte of Lawe" and quaint fantasies of literature / Susan Sage Heinzelman
Summary "Should law be left to the lawyers? Is legal education properly understood as technical education? Law in the Liberal Arts answers no and suggests that our society is not well served by the current professionalization of legal knowledge. An ideal approach to legal education, in Austin Sarat's view, would open up law and legal knowledge by making them the proper objects of inquiry in the liberal arts." "The contributors to this book aim to assess the place of legal scholarship in the liberal arts by asking whether and how legal research and pedagogy are different in liberal arts settings than they are in law schools."--Jacket
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Law -- Study and teaching (Higher) -- United States
Education, Humanistic -- United States
HISTORY -- Historiography.
Education, Humanistic
Law -- Study and teaching (Higher)
Geisteswissenschaften
Hochschulbildung
Recht
United States
USA
Form Electronic book
Author Sarat, Austin
ISBN 9781501729843
1501729845