Form and Substance in Anglo-American Law : A Comparative Study in Legal Reasoning, Legal Theory, and Legal Institutions - P. S. Atiyah

Form and Substance in Anglo-American Law

A Comparative Study in Legal Reasoning, Legal Theory, and Legal Institutions

By: P. S. Atiyah, R. S. Summers

Hardcover | 17 September 1987

At a Glance

Hardcover


$170.45

or 4 interest-free payments of $42.61 with

 or 

Aims to ship in 7 to 10 business days

This book has a comparatively original theme, or set of themes. It offers, first, a new way of analysing styles of legal reasoning - between more ''formal'' and more ''substantive'' styles. This analysis, which is worked out in some detail, is a major contribution to jurisprudence in its own right. The book then goes on to demonstrate in detail the differences in legal reasoning - and in the legal systems as a whole - between England and America, suggesting that the English is a much more ''formal'' legal system and the American a more ''substantive'' one. Thirdly, the book proceeds to explore in detail a wide range of cultural, institutional, and historical factors relating to the two legal systems, an exploration which is not only of value for comparative studies, but also confirms the argument in the first part of the book as to the relative ''formality'' of the two legal systems.
Industry Reviews
'packed with information and thoughtful argument, with illustrations from a wide field and drawing upon a wealth of literary sources that reflect the authors' breadth of perspective. Their approach throughout is judicious and balanced, at pains to avoid pejorative implications or being drawn into invidious debate of which system is preferable.' International and Comparative Law Quarterly 'This book makes an important contribution to comparative studies, both for its jurisprudential model and for its perceptive analysis of American and British legal institutions.' International and Comparative Law Quarterly 'the book provides a fresh perspective that should provoke more realistic assessments of the functions of courts and the possibilities of legal reform at home and abroad' David M. O'Brien, University of Virginia, Journal of the Centre for the Study of Public Policy

Other Editions and Formats

Paperback

Published: 1st January 1994

More in Comparative Law

Rethinking Legitimacy : Courts, Constitutions and Politics - Allan C Hutchinson
The Basic Structure Doctrine in Malaysia : Themes and Perspectives - Kevin YL Tan
Tax, Public Finance, and the Rule of Law - Dominic de Cogan

RRP $190.00

$157.95

17%
OFF
Landmark Cases in EU Law, Volume 2 : The Substantive Cases - Paul Craig
Landmark Cases in EU Law, Volume 1 : The Constitutional Cases - Paul Craig
Copyright and Anonymity in the Creative User-Generated World - Rachel Maguire
Free Speech Theory : A Radical Restatement - Paul Wragg

RRP $180.00

$149.75

17%
OFF
Cause and Consideration : Exploring the Foundations of Contract Law - Bruno Rodríguez-Rosado
Landmark Cases in Consumer Law : Landmark Cases - Jodi Gardner

RRP $110.00

$92.25

16%
OFF
Corporate Restructuring Law in Flux - Jennifer Payne

RRP $240.00

$199.50

17%
OFF
Private Law and Building Safety : Hart Studies in Private Law - Matthew Bell