TY - CHAP
T1 - Legal Realism and Legal Doctrine
AU - Priel, Dan
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Legal realism is popularly known for its hostility to legal doctrine. In the familiar narrative, the realists showed that legal doctrine does not, and cannot, constrain judges from using existing legal materials to reach virtually any outcome they want. As such, doctrine only serves to hides and obfuscate what is better discussed openly. The purpose of this essay is to complicate this familiar story. I focus on one contemporary take on legal realism that argues that an open discussion of values will give the law greater determinacy. I counter this view, first, by showing that it does not, in fact, fit the views of the legal realists, but reflects a modern view that fits contemporary (American) legal discourse. I also argue that it’s very unlikely that such a view would improve the law’s determinacy, and that it is likely to have undesirable consequences. I then propose an alternative, which I trace to work by some of the legal realists. This approach gives a clear role to legal doctrine and, so I argue, is normatively more appealing than the view that minimizes the role of doctrine. © 2021, Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
AB - Legal realism is popularly known for its hostility to legal doctrine. In the familiar narrative, the realists showed that legal doctrine does not, and cannot, constrain judges from using existing legal materials to reach virtually any outcome they want. As such, doctrine only serves to hides and obfuscate what is better discussed openly. The purpose of this essay is to complicate this familiar story. I focus on one contemporary take on legal realism that argues that an open discussion of values will give the law greater determinacy. I counter this view, first, by showing that it does not, in fact, fit the views of the legal realists, but reflects a modern view that fits contemporary (American) legal discourse. I also argue that it’s very unlikely that such a view would improve the law’s determinacy, and that it is likely to have undesirable consequences. I then propose an alternative, which I trace to work by some of the legal realists. This approach gives a clear role to legal doctrine and, so I argue, is normatively more appealing than the view that minimizes the role of doctrine. © 2021, Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
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U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-58186-2_8
DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-58186-2_8
M3 - RGC 12 - Chapter in an edited book (Author)
SN - 978-3-030-58185-5
SN - 978-3-030-58188-6
T3 - Law and Philosophy Library
SP - 139
EP - 169
BT - Judges and Adjudication in Constitutional Democracies
A2 - Chiassoni, Pierluigi
A2 - Spaić, Bojan
PB - Springer, Cham
ER -