Reason in Law, Tenth Edition
University of Chicago Press
10th Edition
Will be published approx. on 24. September 2026
Book
Hardback
320 pages
978-0-226-83708-6 (ISBN)
Description
An indispensable introduction to legal reasoning, updated for today's political and legal environment.
Since it was first published nearly five decades ago, Reason in Law has become the starting point for understanding legal reasoning, a critical component of the rule of law. The editors show how judges can integrate all the elements of a case to persuasively explain their rulings-and, even more importantly, why they sometimes fail to do so. Drawing on cases old and new, Reason in Law enables readers to become sophisticated "judges of judging."
Now in its tenth edition, Reason in Law includes a new chapter on the increasingly contentious and politically consequential field of administrative law and addresses recent developments in the American legal landscape, including growing conservatism in the federal judiciary and the flood of lawsuits brought against the second Trump administration. It also analyzes new cases on the First Amendment rights of high schoolers, transgender civil rights, the responsibilities universities have for student safety, Donald Trump's sweeping claims of executive power, and historic Supreme Court decisions expanding the rights of gun owners and allowing states to criminalize abortion. As always, Reason in Law connects legal theory with empirical research on the American judicial system, showing how trustworthy legal reasoning helps preserve social peace and the rule of law.
Since it was first published nearly five decades ago, Reason in Law has become the starting point for understanding legal reasoning, a critical component of the rule of law. The editors show how judges can integrate all the elements of a case to persuasively explain their rulings-and, even more importantly, why they sometimes fail to do so. Drawing on cases old and new, Reason in Law enables readers to become sophisticated "judges of judging."
Now in its tenth edition, Reason in Law includes a new chapter on the increasingly contentious and politically consequential field of administrative law and addresses recent developments in the American legal landscape, including growing conservatism in the federal judiciary and the flood of lawsuits brought against the second Trump administration. It also analyzes new cases on the First Amendment rights of high schoolers, transgender civil rights, the responsibilities universities have for student safety, Donald Trump's sweeping claims of executive power, and historic Supreme Court decisions expanding the rights of gun owners and allowing states to criminalize abortion. As always, Reason in Law connects legal theory with empirical research on the American judicial system, showing how trustworthy legal reasoning helps preserve social peace and the rule of law.
Reviews / Votes
"A modern classic. For a half-century, Reason in Law has been an indispensable guide to the role of legal reasoning in courts, politics, and society. The tenth edition features many updates and fresh material, including a chapter on administrative law. In engaging and accessible terms, Burke and Silbey make Reason in Law's enduring argument anew: without reasoned analysis the law cannot fairly resolve our disputes or govern our country." -- Keith J. Bybee | author of "All Judges Are Political-Except When They Are Not: Acceptable Hypocrisies and the Rule of Law" "In this dark, increasingly lawless time, we need this new edition of a book calling for reason in law and explaining how and why it matters as the core civic morality for liberal democracy. Burke and Silbey sustain Carter's original vision while updating it, adding to analysis of classic court cases often troubling recent cases plus a welcome new chapter on administrative law. At once highly informative and deeply inspiring, Reason in Law is a must read for legal scholars and an indispensable resource for teachers of law at all levels." -- Michael McCann | University of WashingtonMore details
Edition
Tenth Edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Chicago
United States
Publishing group
The University of Chicago Press
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-226-83708-6 (9780226837086)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Lief H. Carter (1940-2023), the founding author of Reason in Law, was professor emeritus of political science at Colorado College. Thomas F. Burke is the Ralph Emerson and Alice Freeman Palmer Professor of Political Science at Wellesley College. His previous books include How Policy Shapes Politics. Jessica Silbey is the Honorable Frank H. Kenison Distinguished Scholar in Law at the Boston University School of Law and a Guggenheim Fellow. Her previous books include Against Progress: Intellectual Property and Fundamental Rights in the Internet Age.
Content
Foreword: Defending Reason in Law by Kim Lane Scheppele
Prefaces to the Tenth Edition
1. What Legal Reasoning Is and Why It Matters
2. Change and Stability in Legal Reasoning
3. Common Law
4. Statutory Interpretation
5. Interpreting the US Constitution
6. Administrative Law
7. Law and Politics
Appendix A: Introduction to Legal Procedure and Terminology
Index of Cases
Index
Prefaces to the Tenth Edition
1. What Legal Reasoning Is and Why It Matters
2. Change and Stability in Legal Reasoning
3. Common Law
4. Statutory Interpretation
5. Interpreting the US Constitution
6. Administrative Law
7. Law and Politics
Appendix A: Introduction to Legal Procedure and Terminology
Index of Cases
Index