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Across the globe law in all its variety is becoming more central to politics, public policy and everyday life. Top sociolegal scholars use Kagan's concepts and methods to examine the politics of litigation and regulation around the world.
List of contents
Notes on Contributors Acknowledgments 1. Introduction: What We Talk About When We Talk About Law Thomas F. Burke and Jeb Barnes 2. Adversarial Legalism, Civil Rights, and the Exceptional American State R. Shep Melnick 3. Seeing Through the Smoke: Adversarial Legalism and U.S. Tobacco Politics Michael McCann and William Haltom 4. Kagan’s Atlantic Crossing: Adversarial Legalism, Eurolegalism, and Cooperative Legalism in European Regulatory Style, Francesca Bignami and R. Daniel Keleman 5. Coping With Auto Accidents in Russia, Kathryn Hendley 6. Overcoming the Disconnect: Internal Regulation and the Mining Industry Neil Gunningham 7. Devolving Standards: California’s Structural Failures in Response to Prisoner Litigation Malcolm M. Feeley and Van Swearingen 8. Style Matters: On the Role of Pattern Analysis in the Study of Regulation Cary Coglianese 9. The Politics of Legalism [Thomas F. Burke and Jeb Barnes
About the author
Thomas F. Burke is Professor of Political Science at Wellesley College. His research focuses on the place of rights and litigation in public policy, and the ways in which organizations respond to rights laws. His most recent books are How Policy Shapes Politics (2015), coauthored with Jeb Barnes, and the ninth edition of Reason in Law (2016) coauthored with Lief Carter. In a stroke of extraordinary luck, his Ph.D. dissertation, Litigation and its Discontents, was supervised by Robert Kagan. It won the 1996 Edwin S. Corwin Award for best dissertation in public law.
Jeb Barnes is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Southern California and a former Robert Wood Johnson Scholar in Health Policy Research. He is the author of five books and numerous peer-reviewed articles on the intersection of law, politics, and public policy and mixed-methods research strategies, most recently How Policy Shapes Politics (2015), coauthored with Thomas F. Burke, and Finding Pathways: Mixed-Method Research for Studying Causal Mechanisms (2014) coauthored with Nicholas Weller.
Summary
Across the globe law in all its variety is becoming more central to politics, public policy, and everyday life. Top sociolegal scholars use Robert A. Kagan's concepts and methods to examine the politics of litigation and regulation around the world.
Additional text
'Varieties of Legal Order is a fitting tribute to Robert Kagan. It contains an important set of essays by a prominent group of scholars who explore Kagan’s seminal distinction between adversarial and bureaucratic legalism in ways that should be of interest to scholars in many of fields.' - Herbert M. Kritzer, Marvin J. Sonosky Chair of Law and Public Policy, University of Minnesota
'This is a rich and diverse overview of the relationship between law, politics, and public policy. Leading scholars examine the political struggles over different forms of law and how those different forms shape social institutions. Varieties of Legal Order provides a thoughtful, nuanced introduction to a provocative set of conversations about the profusion of law across the globe.' - Susan S. Silbey, Leon and Anne Goldberg Professor of Sociology and Anthropology, and Professor of Behavioral and Policy Sciences, MIT