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dc.contributor.authorMoyn, Samuel
dc.date.accessioned2024-12-18T17:13:31Z
dc.date.available2024-12-18T17:13:31Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.identifier.citationSamuel Moyn, Reconstructing Critical Legal Studies, 134 Yale Law Journal 77 (2024).en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13051/18475
dc.description.abstractIt is an increasingly propitious moment to build another radical theory of law, after decades of relative quiescence in law schools since the last such opportunity. This Essay offers a reinterpretation of the legacy of critical theories of law, arguing that they afford useful starting points for any radical approach, rather than merely cautionary tales of how not to proceed. This Essay revisits the critical legal studies movement and imagines its reconstruction. Critical legal studies extended the social theory of law pioneered by legal realism and framed law as a forceful instrument of domination. However, critical legal studies also recognized that such a theory of law is compatible with both functional and interpretative underdeterminacy. Legal order oppresses, and the way it does so is never accidental or random--in other words, law is often determinate enough that it routinely serves oppression. Yet at the same time, law regularly accommodates alternative pathways of control and contestation through processes of interpretation of elusive or vague legal meaning by courts and other institutions. This Essay concludes by showing that the parameters of a radical social theory of law--parameters we should reclaim critical legal studies for helping establish--apply to current or future attempts to build any successor, taking account of critical race theory, feminist legal thought, and most especially the emergent law-and-political economy movement. The law-and-political-economy movement is the most prominent leftist or at least progressive movement in law schools today, but critical legal studies challenges it to better identify its core principles. Had critical legal studies never existed, it would have to be invented today.en_US
dc.publisherYale Law Journalen_US
dc.subjectCritical theory; Social theory; Legal realism; Law schools; Radical theoryen_US
dc.titleReconstructing Critical Legal Studies.en_US
rioxxterms.versionNAen_US
rioxxterms.typeJournal Article/Reviewen_US
refterms.dateFOA2024-12-18T17:13:33Z
refterms.dateFirstOnline2024


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