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School of Law

SOLM183 Historical Jurisprudence

This module is not running for 2024-25 entry. Check our LLM and Diploma module list to see other related modules you could take.

Module Description

Historical jurisprudence is a neglected tradition of theorising law. Contemporary debates in legal theory are still dominated by debates between legal positivism and natural law, and to a lesser extent, legal realism, sociological jurisprudence, and critical legal studies. While it has been neglected in contemporary scholarship, historical jurisprudence has a rich history, with debates over the value of history for law occurring in e.g. 16th century France, 17th century England, and 19th century Germany and England. The late 20th century has seen some revivals of the tradition – in particular in US legal scholarship, and in field of international law. This course will introduce students to the neglected tradition of historical jurisprudence, as well as making a case for its importance in scholarship and theory today. 

Applicable Groupings

Mode of Assessment

3,000-4,000 word essay

Credits

15 Credits

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