Steven Burton's AN INTRODUCTION TO LAW AND LEGAL REASONING, Second Edition continues to be an ideal learning tool for first-year law students in a variety of introductory courses including orientation programs, legal reasoning, lawyering skills, or first-year substantive courses. Written specifically for beginning law students, this concise paperback helps students gain an understanding of law and legal reasoning by emphasizing how they can use cases, rules, precedent, holding, and other elementary legal concepts to solve legal problems. Especially easy to use, The Second Edition: offers concise, lucid text gives more attention to competing, contemporary modes of analysis including Critical Legal Studies and philosophical critiques clearly delineates the structure of law as precedents, rules, principles, and policies introduces many new examples coherently organized in nine chapters, INTRODUCTION TO LAW AND LEGAL REASONING covers cases and rules, analogical and deductive legal reasoning, legal reasons and conventions, purposes, judges' and lawyers' perspectives, and legitimacy. short and affordable, this book is a good fit for orientation programs, introductory courses on legal reasoning or legal method, lawyering skills courses, or as a supplementary text in any first-year substantive course.
During my first year of law school I asked my "legal research and writing" professor for an excellent and clearly written introduction to legal reasoning. He recommended Professor Burton's book. This book will "demystify" all the bulls**t that first year professors want you to figure out for yourself. If all 1L's read this book, more law students will acquire a full skill-set during first year. Instead, the irrational legal educational system prefers to teach fear, insecurity, stress, and other unnecessary lessons that do not benefit law students, lawyers, or the public which we all aim to serve. Law professors shouldn't worry because they can still teach discipline, the art of inquiry, and HELP students LEARN. Caveat: This book is not the Holy Grail. You still have to read all your cases and study for your exams. However, you will better understand "The Big Picture" and write an excellent exam if you take the time to understand what Professor Burton has clearly imparted in this book.If you appreciate what I've said, feel free to ask me for more advice on how 1Ls and other law students can stop wasting time and reduce fear, insecurity, and stress.Damien
Excellent Introduction to legal theory and reasoning...
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
in an easy-to-read short book. Burton has given the beginning student of law and layperson a very approachable introduction in plain language. A must for first-year law students or 1L's-to-be to put their learning into a context of legal theory. A good primer before moving onto reading Cardozo's The Nature of the Judicial Process and the Hart's The Concept of Law, both of which I'd recommend to 1L's interested in jurisprudence. Burton's primer is an introduction to how cases and rules relate in analogical and deductive legal reasoning; how legal reasons, conventions, policy, purposes, and not just rules alone, are used to help lawyers make predictions and judges make decisions. Finally, it concludes with a brief chapter on the legitimacy of our legal system. Core foundational ideas from which any law student begins to build his/her knowledge and understanding and then application of legal reasoning.
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