Laughing at the Gods: Great Judges and How They Made the Common Law

Laughing at the Gods: Great Judges and How They Made the Common Law

Files

Find Full Text

Available in the Osgoode Hall Law School Library

Description

Any effort to understand how law works has to take seriously its main players – judges. Like any performance, judging should be evaluated by reference to those who are its best exponents. Not surprisingly, the debate about what makes a 'great judge' is as heated and inconclusive as the debate about the purpose and nature of law itself. History shows that those who are generally considered to be candidates for a judicial hall of fame are game changers who oblige us to rethink what it is to be a good judge. So the best of judges must tread a thin line between modesty and hubris; they must be neither mere umpires nor demigods. The eight judges showcased in this book demonstrate that, if the test of good judging is not about getting it right, but doing it well, then the measure of great judging is about setting new standards for what counts as judging well.

ISBN

9781107017269

Publication Date

2012

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

City

New York

Keywords

Judges--Biography; Common law--History; Judge-made law--History

Disciplines

Common Law | Judges

Comments

Bibliographic Citation
Hutchinson, Allan C. Laughing at the Gods: Great Judges and How They Made the Common Law. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2012. Print.

Laughing at the Gods: Great Judges and How They Made the Common Law

Share

COinS