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Balkinization Symposiums: A Continuing List                                                                E-mail: Jack Balkin: jackbalkin at yahoo.com Bruce Ackerman bruce.ackerman at yale.edu Ian Ayres ian.ayres at yale.edu Corey Brettschneider corey_brettschneider at brown.edu Mary Dudziak mary.l.dudziak at emory.edu Joey Fishkin joey.fishkin at gmail.com Heather Gerken heather.gerken at yale.edu Abbe Gluck abbe.gluck at yale.edu Mark Graber mgraber at law.umaryland.edu Stephen Griffin sgriffin at tulane.edu Jonathan Hafetz jonathan.hafetz at shu.edu Jeremy Kessler jkessler at law.columbia.edu Andrew Koppelman akoppelman at law.northwestern.edu Marty Lederman msl46 at law.georgetown.edu Sanford Levinson slevinson at law.utexas.edu David Luban david.luban at gmail.com Gerard Magliocca gmaglioc at iupui.edu Jason Mazzone mazzonej at illinois.edu Linda McClain lmcclain at bu.edu John Mikhail mikhail at law.georgetown.edu Frank Pasquale pasquale.frank at gmail.com Nate Persily npersily at gmail.com Michael Stokes Paulsen michaelstokespaulsen at gmail.com Deborah Pearlstein dpearlst at yu.edu Rick Pildes rick.pildes at nyu.edu David Pozen dpozen at law.columbia.edu Richard Primus raprimus at umich.edu K. Sabeel Rahmansabeel.rahman at brooklaw.edu Alice Ristroph alice.ristroph at shu.edu Neil Siegel siegel at law.duke.edu David Super david.super at law.georgetown.edu Brian Tamanaha btamanaha at wulaw.wustl.edu Nelson Tebbe nelson.tebbe at brooklaw.edu Mark Tushnet mtushnet at law.harvard.edu Adam Winkler winkler at ucla.edu Compendium of posts on Hobby Lobby and related cases The Anti-Torture Memos: Balkinization Posts on Torture, Interrogation, Detention, War Powers, and OLC The Anti-Torture Memos (arranged by topic) Recent Posts A New Generation of Critical Legal Studies, Or A Repudiation?
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Monday, February 11, 2008
A New Generation of Critical Legal Studies, Or A Repudiation?
Brian Tamanaha
Jack’s thoughtful essay on Critical Legal Theory Today—which I highly recommend—has an odd quality. It is presented as continuous with CLS of the 1970s and 1980s, updated to confront the legal challenges of the current period. But it can also be read as an argument for why folks on the political left should repudiate CLS, an argument I will draw out in this post.
Comments:
"The choice of the left must be to stand up and defend the law and the integrity of law."
The left can not defend the law and the integrity of the law. 70 plus years of illegitimate constitutional 'change' the left treasures rests precisely on abandoning the law, and it's integrity. Embrace the law, and it's integrity, and you have to abandon the 'living' Constitution, in favor of the written one, the one that doesn't authorize the regulatory leviathan.
What is also interesting - and I agree with your point that at least "pejorative" critical legal theory needs to be roundly criticized - is that CLSers seemed to have been completely unaware of the soon-to-be powerful New Right legal movement that was gaining steam at precisely the point that when they decided to "trash" rights-based liberalism (and this is a question ???)
IOW, did the CLSers believe that the game was so tilted in their favor that they didn't need to worry about the conservative vision -- law is (right-wing) politics -- that was emerging ???
Calvin
Your observation is an astute one. If you read Jack's essay, the timing is off in just the way you suggest. It's a bit hard to figure out, in hindsight, why this seemed like a smart move from a political standpoint, given the evident resurgence of conservatism, at least since the early 1980s. I can only surmise that a part of the explanation is frustration, disappointment, and lashing out, at what they must have seen as the disappointed promise of the Warren Court. But I don't know. Brian
Professor Tamanaha:
"The choice of the left must be to stand up and defend the law and the integrity of law." I can only surmise that a part of the explanation is frustration, disappointment, and lashing out, at what they must have seen as the disappointed promise of the Warren Court. There is more than a touch of reactionary hypocrisy here. So long as the institutions of law - the courts, the bureaucratic quasi courts and Congress - were securely in liberal hands, the left never gave a second thought to ignoring the checks of our Constitution and democratic branches. After all, our Constitution was a "living document" which could be changed at will by each succeeding generation. However, now that a new generation has arrived and these institutions are in conservative hands or contested and the extra-legal acts of the old liberal courts and congresses are in danger of being reversed, the left now calls for respecting the integrity of the law. However, the law to which the left refers is not the Constitution. Rather, it is the old liberal rewritings of the Constitution.
Bart,
It's understandable that you see some hypocrisy in the situation (though "reactionary" does not fit). If the courts were stocked with liberal judges, you are likely correct that people on the left would not be raising the same objections. It's also important to note, however, that important left-leaning law professors expressed discomfort (or flat disagreement) at the time with the legal basis for some of the Warren and Burger Court decisions. Indeed, CLS in part was reacting to this left opposition. So your overall charge of left hypocrisy is over-drawn. Just as important, remember the hypocrisy of conservatives. They wanted strict construction and attacked judicial activism when they saw the courts as dominated by liberals. But now there are increasing calls from conservative quarters for judicial activism. It's for this reason that we (left and right) are all better off insisting that judges should strive to apply the law as best they can, and leave politics to the political realm (understanding that there can never be a complete separation between the two). Too much cynicism about law on both sides will leave us all losers. Brian
Brian,
Where (presuming it) does "cause lawyering" (Austin Sarat, et al.) fit into these narratives? Is it an unintentional by-product or spillover effect of the theoretical and practical shortcomings of CLS, or perhaps a deliberate attempt to salvage the Leftist spirit of CLS, or...?
Patrick,
Cause lawyering, in my view, has an independent heritage that goes back to the ACLU early in the century, and later the Legal Defense Fund, with many imitators thereafter. It worked, and that was all the encouragement it needed. Whether it had any concrete connections with CLS, I don't know. I tend to believe that the causal impact of theory on action is often exaggerated. And in this case I would say there was probably no close connection; if if anything there was a bit of tension, because cause lawyers were drawing upon the resources of legal liberalism. Brian
I agree completely that a fundamental flaw in much (not all) of CLS was not understanding power relationships -- the "who rides whom" question. This was a general problem with the wave of post-moderism and post-structuralism that swept over much of the humanities and some social sciences in the 1980s and 1990s.
There was also a whiff of self-importance by the professariat. Articles deconstructing this or that were themselves radical agents of change, because (it was essentially argued), puncturing the existing order in any spot was sufficient to deflate the whole balloon. Some of the comments on this thread miss the point that CLS was meant as a critique of "liberal" jurisprudence at least as much as anything else (including but not limited to "rights talk"). Finally, yeah, the exchange between M. Horwitz and E.P. Thompson re Whigs and Hunters is essential to understanding all this.
As perhaps a footnote, the CLS "deconstruction of law" was always philosophically naive. Its vaguely postmodernist stance on rules was silly and drove me to distraction back in the early 1980's. Then my job, on a law review, was to reject or edit submissions from one CLSer after another.
Invariably the articles misunderstood the gist of underdetermination (a fact of life, even of science) and of Wittgenstein's remarks on following rules. Each leaves rules of inquiry and everyday life fully in place. Intellectual purity aside, the papers were nonsense from a common sense standpoint. Taken at face value, they were arguments against traffic law as much as against commercial and constitutional law. Moreover their residual point, that political power affects how laws are promulgated and construed, had a kernel of truth that was a whole lot less profound than the authors claimed. And given that the authors had lost track of the point and purpose of legal rules, that political critique was only haphazardly illuminating. For the most part it was hamstrung by all the overstatement. Not to take her side, but what Hillary Clinton said about LBJ and Martin Luther King is a corollary to the point Jack Balkin makes in his paper. A civil rights lawyer makes sure to go to court with a statute in hand. A King speech may be included, but it's no basis for relief.
Yes, the rule of law is an essential political ideal, even for the extreme far left. On this point, I would recommend Christine Sypnowich's book "The Concept of Socialist Law," which shows how the law and legal institutions would be essential for a socialist state. At the same time, we must avoid fetishizing the rule of law. First of all, there is the problem of bad coherence, when the entire system or a section of it is rotten to the core. Second, the 'rule of law' glosses over the underlying contradictions in legal doctrines by implying that there is a single rule that applies in most cases when in fact most cases are won by extra-legal factors such as status or ability to pay. Finally, the rule of law is not as great as it sounds in a society like ours where wealth and power are so unequally distributed that most people have no effective access to the court system, and no power once they get to court. And most of the systemic bias in our system is mediated by the law, which means that the rule of law, in practice, simply legitimates inequality by lending it a kind of otherworldly justification. So you are right that the CLS attack on the rule of law was muddled and self-contradictory. They were unduly nihilistic, but sometimes a dose of that is useful.
"The choice of the left must be to stand up and defend the integrity of law."
As a newly-minted plaintiffs' employment lawyer, this statement truly mystifies me. Why wouldn't the left chose to stand up and assert its own power through the law? CLS is exactly right: law is political, and that's why we have to use our political power to create and enforce the law the way we want it to be done. The other side knows this, and we'll lose if we don't meet them on the same playing field.
@Foot: Yours is the first comment that really resonates for me. I never got that CLS proposed anarchy, on the contrary, it was, I thought, supposed to serve justice by building political savvy and will to create and enforce laws justly rather than as an adjunct to the power already held by the privileged classes.
I confess, I haven't treated myself to the text of our host's essay yet.
"I thought, supposed to serve justice by building political savvy and will to create and enforce laws justly rather than as an adjunct to the power already held by the privileged classes."
Well, do something 'justly', while tearing away at the reasons anybody who doesn't share your precise conception of justice might have to go along with what you're doing. It's so amusing watching people who don't give a bucket of warm spit about the law, and who are willing to say so, demand that others obey it.
To be a bit more charitable to the CLS folks, I don't think their point was "we should reject notions about 'the rule of law' because it's a bad thing and substitute pure politics, because that's a good thing"; the argument was more that "the 'rule of law' necessarily can't exist (because language, categories, and other necessary compenents of the rule of law are inherently indeterminate and/or incoherent), so it would be best if we just all realized law is merely politics."
One might disagree with that (stated as broadly as the CLSers often stated it, I did). But the CLS critique of the legal process/neutral principles school was more that it *couldn't* be done (and thus we shouldn't pretend) rather than it *shouldn't* be done.
Brett: It's so amusing watching people who don't give a bucket of warm spit about the law, and who are willing to say so, demand that others obey it.
Agreed. That's why W is such a funny clown.
Point of distinction: CLS isn't based in the liberal left. Its a reaction to and critique of liberalism. CLS is employs the old marxist paradigm and asks "what are the tools of the modes of production and how do i place them in the hands of the worker?" So to use the broad brush and say "the left cannot defend the law" is like saying "the right can't defend freedom." There is a vast gap, perhaps much greater than the divide between left and right, between liberalism and radicalism. if there's a message from the article, its See What Radicalism Gets You? (like the radicalism on the right) "Evolving standards of human decency" and Power To The People are not the same rallying cries.
CLS was indeed a reaction against liberalism, a form of radicalism, but it wasn't really Marxist, indeed it was often fairly consciously anti-Marxist. Why worry about class struggle when writing radical law review articles was (in the view of some) pretty much equally destabilizing to the existing order?
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