
The Common Law and English Jurisprudence, 1760-1850
$179.19
- Hardcover
332 pages
- Release Date
25 July 1991
Summary
The Soul of the Common Law: English Jurisprudence, 1760-1850
Michael Lobban re-examines English law and jurisprudence between 1760 and 1850, offering fresh insights into common-law practice and the perspectives of its practitioners. Challenging conventional wisdom, he contends that theoretical approaches to common law, such as those of Blackstone and Bentham, were fundamentally flawed. While acknowledging the influence of moral and political philosophy, Lobban focuses on the practic…
Book Details
ISBN-13: | 9780198252931 |
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ISBN-10: | 0198252935 |
Author: | Michael Lobban |
Publisher: | Oxford University Press |
Imprint: | Clarendon Press |
Format: | Hardcover |
Number of Pages: | 332 |
Release Date: | 25 July 1991 |
Weight: | 508g |
Dimensions: | 224mm x 142mm x 23mm |
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Critics Review
will prove highly valuable to legal philosophers and historians alike
the book which Dr. Lobban has written will prove highly valuable to legal philosophers and historians alike'The Cambridge Law JournalDistinguished recent works by Lieberman and Postema within the territory covered by this book have sought to add a third element - jurisprudence - to the creative tension posited between external social forces and internal development of legal doctrine … Michael Lobban’s book deserves to stand alongside these works both in terms of its scholarship and for its similarly supple solutions to complex problems of method … Lobban’s fascinating description ofhow the procedures operated demonstrates in detail the paradoxes behind the common law.‘History of Political Thought’The Common Law and English Jurisprudence offers a sound historical and bibliographical context for the theories of Blackstone, Bentham and Austin; and those students (and colleagues) showing a not untypical concern for the ‘remoteness’ of jurisprudential enquiry could usefully be directed to this work … impressive work … an admirable contribution to the history of legal thought and to the study of legal writing between Blackstone and Austin. MichaelLobban appears to have a mature feel for the legal literature of the period under discussion. The student of jurisprudence will be able to read this book with profit.‘Peter J. Cook, University of Birmingham, The Journal of Legal History, Vol. 13, No. 2, Aug. 1992’Lobban’s thesis is complex and highly original; he is persuasive in arguing for a wholesale revision in historical understanding of nineteenth-century legal evolution.‘A.W. Brian Simpson, University of Michigan Law School, Journal of British Studies, January 1993’Lobban’s reading of Bentham is highly stimulating since it shows how contemporaries took up individual Benthamite notions without adopting his political programme for complete codification. ‘German Historical Institute London Bulletin, Volume XVI, No. 1, February 1994Lobban's reading of Bentham is highly stimulating.'German Historical Institute BulletinLobban covers a formidably wide range of material and gives clever, confident commentary on all the literature he reviews. His book is most valuable for the fresh light which his study of the practical aspects of the common law throws on the theories of Blackstone, Bentham and Austin.‘EHR, Nov 1994
About The Author
Michael Lobban
Andrew Lobban is currently Reader in Law at Queen Mary, University of London, and has previously worked at St. John’s College Oxford (1988-91), Durham University (1991-7), and Brunel University (1997-2000).
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