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Beyond the Formalist-Realist Divide: The Politics of Judging

My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Not for the nonlawyers, because if you haven't gotten at least a three year law school dose of legal history with the traditional story about the realists and their politics of law taking over from the stodgy old formalists, it won't mean a damned thing.
If you have been to law school, the first half of this book is a fantastic revisionist counterfactual, calling into question everything we're taught about Holmes and Cardozo and Pound and that entire lot. Tamanaha leans on the primary sources to explain how the idea of formalism was actually invented by radical realists, and that in fact judges as far back as the 1850's candidly discuss the role of politics and indeterminacy in judging. That part is fascinating and illuminating. I was less thrilled with the second half, which discusses at length how the quantitative study of judging has imported this false intellectual dichotomy to its detriment, and its biased studies are misinterpreted in the service of disproving formalism, which doesn't really exist, anyway. Fine, but the use of the tools of historical analysis to try to take down social science methodology was just wrong. You don't get to complain about bias inherited from a historical narrative, and then suggest the answer is to supply a second narrative. That entirely misses the point, which is that social science methodology needs to be critiqued with statistics and actual analysis. Sigh.
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