04312oam 2200673I 450 991079817120332120230126214002.01-317-24555-51-315-62994-11-317-24554-710.4324/9781315629940 (CKB)3710000000603965(EBL)4415660(SSID)ssj0001680791(PQKBManifestationID)16502047(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001680791(PQKBWorkID)14797974(PQKB)11197822(MiAaPQ)EBC4415660(OCoLC)958105423(EXLCZ)99371000000060396520180706d2016 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrLegal culture in the United States an introduction /Kirk W. JunkerAbingdon, Oxon ;New York :Routledge,2016.1 online resource (269 p.)Zones of ReligionIncludes index.1-138-19430-1 1-138-64245-2 Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Table of Contents; Acknowledgements; Foreword; Preface: Seeing Law through the Reference Frames of Culture; 1 The Goal: Knowing the Soul and Spirit of U.S. Legal Culture through the Experience of the Common Law; 1.1 Framing Issues; 1.1.1 Spirit; 1.1.2 Soul; 1.1.3 The Spirit and the Soul of Advocacy; 1.2 Conclusions from Experience; Literature; 2 The Always and Already Comparative Nature of "Foreign" Law; Framing Issues; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Cognitive Status Quo; 2.2.1 Why Compare? A Brief History of Comparative Law; 2.2.2 Comparative Method3.3 Comparisons within the Family: English Law and U.S. LawLiterature; 4 The Historical Reference Frame of "Kingless Commonwealths on the Other Shore of the Atlantic"1; Framing Issues; 4.1 The Problems of History; 4.2 Framing the Questions of History, U.S. History and U.S. Legal History; 4.2.1 The Static View; 4.2.2 The Circular or Cyclical View; 4.2.3 The Progressive or Enlightenment View; 4.2.4 The Spiral View; 4.2.5 The Cataclysmic View; 4.2.6 The Regressive View; 4.3 Proceeding from the Assumptions in the Various Views; 4.4 The Use and Abuse of History4.5 Punished by Places and by Times: Establishing an Historical Narrative for U.S. Law4.5.1 The Birth of the Common Law; 4.5.2 Early Period: Eleventh-Thirteenth Centuries; 4.5.3 Middle Period: 1340s-1640s; 4.5.4 The Modern Period: The Eighteenth Century Until Today; 4.6 U.S. History; 4.7 U.S. Legal History; 4.8 Conclusion; Literature; 5 The Social Reference Frame: Cultural Practices We Call "Law"; Framing Issues; 5.1 Introduction: Does Society Want Legal Specialists?; 5.1.1 The Social Approach to the Legal Actors; 5.1.2 Legal Practice and Training in the United States5.1.3 U.S. Legal Education and Practice Immediately After Independence5.1.4 General Considerations for Admission to the Practice of Law; 5.1.5 Legal Education in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries; 5.2 The United States Today: Entry into the Profession of Practicing Law; 5.3 Foreign Lawyer Practice in the United States (LL.M. and Foreign Legal Advisor); 5.4 Legal Science; 5.5 Lawyers and Law Students by the Numbers; 5.5.1 Gender; 5.5.2 Race; 5.6 A New Millennium for Common Law Education, A New Century for U.S. Legal Education; 5.7 Conclusion: Are the Horses in the Street Frightened Yet?LiteratureZones of ReligionLawUnited StatesMethodologyCulture and lawUnited StatesJustice, Administration ofSocial aspectsUnited StatesAdversary system (Law)Social aspectsUnited StatesSociological jurisprudenceUnited StatesLawMethodology.Culture and lawJustice, Administration ofSocial aspectsAdversary system (Law)Social aspectsSociological jurisprudence340/.1150973Junker Kirk W.1576840MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910798171203321Legal culture in the United States3854942UNINA