Law's History: American Legal
Thought and the Transatlantic Turn to History
by Davod M. Rabban
This is a study of the central role of history in late
nineteenth-century American legal thought. In the decades following the Civil
War, the founding generation of professional legal scholars in the United
States drew from the evolutionary social thought that pervaded Western
intellectual life on both sides of the Atlantic. Their historical analysis of
law as an inductive science rejected deductive theories and supported moderate
legal reform, conclusions that challenge conventional accounts of legal
formalism. Unprecedented in its coverage and its innovative conclusions about
major American legal thinkers from the Civil War to the present, the book
combines transatlantic intellectual history, legal history, the history of
legal thought, historiography, jurisprudence, constitutional theory and the
history of higher education.