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- Title
Leon Petrażycki and contemporary socio-legal studies.
- Authors
Cotterrell, Roger
- Abstract
The work of the Polish–Russian scholar Leon Petrażycki from the early decades of the twentieth century holds a strikingly paradoxical position in the literature of juristic and socio-legal scholarship: on the one hand, lauded as a supremely valuable contribution to knowledge about the nature of law and, on the other, widely neglected and little known. This paper asks how far Petrażycki's theories, expressed in writings by and about him available to an international readership, can provide insight for contemporary socio-legal studies – not as historical background but as living ideas. How far can his work speak to current issues and inform current debates? What obstacles stand in the way of this? Why have few international scholars engaged with his theories despite their rigour and originality? The paper starts from this last issue before addressing the others. It argues that Petrażycki's radical legal theory offers strikingly distinctive resources for rethinking issues about the role of law in multicultural societies, the nature of developing transnational law, and the significance of law as an aspect or expression of culture.
- Subjects
PETRAZYCKI, Leon, 1867-1931; JURISPRUDENCE; SOCIOLOGICAL jurisprudence; LEGAL research; SCHOLARS
- Publication
International Journal of Law in Context, 2015, Vol 11, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
1744-5523
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1017/S1744552314000330