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The Law's Two Bodies: Some Evidential Problems in English Legal History (Clarendon Law Lectures) (Hardback)
$63.52 - Save $8.03 (11%) - RRP $71.55 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 7 days | |Short Description for The Law's Two BodiesThe book is about the informal sources of English Law that lie undiscovered because they are not included in Statutes, law reports, or in current legal teaching. Through his work with primary documents the author shows that this informal source of law is too important to go unnoticed by legal historians and commentators.
Full description- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Published: 06 September 2001
- Format: Hardback 218 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Linguistics | Common Law | Legal History | Legal System: General | Constitutional & Administrative Law | History: Specific Events & Topics
- ISBN 13: 9780199245185 ISBN 10: 0199245185
- Sales rank: 1,075,947
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Full description for The Law's Two Bodies
The common law is almost universally regarded as a system of case-law, increasingly supplemented by legislation, but this is only partly true. There is an extensive body of lawyers' law which has a real existence outside the formal sources but is seldom acknowledged or discussed either by theorists or legal historians. This will still be so even when every judicial decision is electronically accessible. In the heyday of the inns of court, this second body of law was partly expressed in 'common learning'. a corpus of legal doctrine handed on largely by oral tradition and a system of education informing the mind of every common lawyer. That common learning emanated from a law school in which the judges actively participated, and in which the lecturers of one generation provided the judiciary of the next. Some of it was written down, though the texts were until recently forgotten, and its importance was overlooked by historians as a result of changes in the common-law system during the early-modern period. Other forms of informal law may be seen at work in other times and contexts. Although judicial decisions will always remain prime sources of legal history, as well as of law, the other body of legal thought and practice is equally 'law' in that it influences lawyers and has real consequences. Neither the history nor the present working of the common law can be understood without acknowledging its importance.

