The Transformation of American Legal History: Essays in Honor of Morton J. Horwitz, Daniel W. Hamilton & Alfred L. Brophy, Editors
Posted: 3 Aug 2008
Date Written: August 1, 2008
Abstract
Over his career at Harvard, Morton Horwitz changed the questions legal historians ask. The Transformation of American Law, 1780-1860 (1977) disclosed the many ways that judge-made law favored commercial and property interests and remade law to promote economic growth. The Transformation of American Law, 1870-1960 (1992) continued that project, with a focus on ideas that reshaped law as we struggled for objective and neutral legal responses to our country's crises. He has now turned to the twentieth century's revolution in rights in the Warren Court.
In The Transformation of American Legal History, Horwitz's students and colleagues re-examine legal history from America's colonial era to the late twentieth century. They ask classic Horwitzian questions, of how legal doctrine, thought, and practice are shaped by the interests of the powerful, as well as by the ideas of lawyers, politicians, and others. They span the colonial empire, the history of the book, legal practice, slavery, property, corporations, legal pluralism, intellectual property, the civil rights movement, the Warren Court, and Israeli legal history. The essays address current questions in legal history, from colonial legal practice, to questions of empire, civil rights, and constitutionalism in a democracy. The essays are, like Horwitz, provocative and original as they continue his transformation of American legal history.
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