Law's Machinery : Reforming the Craft of Lawyering in America's Industrial Age
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
Oxford Legal History
ISBN-10
0197543936
ISBN-13
9780197543931
Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint
Oxford University Press Inc
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Feb 20th, 2025
Print length
322 Pages
Weight
590 grams
Dimensions
22.40 x 15.50 x 2.30 cms
Product Classification:
History of the AmericasPolitical science & theoryLegal historyLegal system: general
Ksh 15,950.00
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Often overlooked by histories of the world's famous code systems, mid-nineteenth century America settled on a code of practice that elevated lawyers as the dominant force of the country's legal institutions. Law's Machinery draws on innovative methods in digital legal history and offers a sweeping intellectual, cultural, and political account of the modernization of American legal practice.
It was perhaps fitting that in an age of industrialization, Americans began to think of the law as a tool, one that could be forged to fit their needs, without regard to the traditional ways of litigating cases in court. Law''s Machinery explores how innovators like New York attorney David Dudley Field, and his associates across the elite American bar, legislated a "code of practice" and attempted to rebuild the practice of law from the ground up in the mid-nineteenth century. While many of their efforts proved futile or misguided, the codifiers ultimately succeeded in turning American law into a machine run by, and in the interests of, professional lawyers like themselves. Often overlooked by histories of the world''s famous code systems, the United States settled on a code of practice that elevated lawyers as the dominant force of the country''s legal institutions. Professor Funk''s account ranges widely: from the Jacksonian Era to the end of the Gilded Age; from urban Gotham to the peripheries of the American West and the Reconstruction-era South; and from the parlours of Brooklyn pastors and merchants to the ornamented courthouses of Wall Street. Drawing on innovative methods in digital legal history, Law''s Machinery offers a sweeping intellectual, cultural, and political telling of the modernization of American legal practice.
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