Selected Product: | The Bramble Bush: The Classic Lectures on the Law and Law School Paperback Author: Karl N Llewellyn Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA Release Date: 2008-04-15 ISBN-10: 0195368452 ISBN-13: 9780195368451 List Price: $19.95 | | Getting To Maybe: How to Excel on Law School Exams ISBN-10: 0890897603 ISBN-13: 9780890897607 List Price:$25.00 Law School Confidential (Revised Edition): A Complete Guide to the Law School Experience: By Students, for Students ISBN-10: 0312318812 ISBN-13: 9780312318819 List Price:$18.95 An Introduction to Legal Reasoning (Phoenix Books) ISBN-10: 0226474089 ISBN-13: 9780226474083 List Price:$10.00 Starting Off Right in Law School ISBN-10: 0890898774 ISBN-13: 9780890898772 List Price:$16.00 Law School Without Fear: Strategies for Success (2nd Edition) ISBN-10: 1587781875 ISBN-13: 9781587781872 List Price:$33.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Bramble Bush: The Classic Lectures on the Law and Law School by Karl N Llewellyn (ISBN-10: 0195368452, ISBN-13: 9780195368451). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Bramble Bush: The Classic Lectures on the Law and Law School by Karl N Llewellyn (ISBN-10: 0195368452, ISBN-13: 9780195368451). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com For over seventy years, there has been one book that law students have read to prepare for what they were about to encounter. That book is The Bramble Bush. After all these years and many imitators, The Bramble Bush remains one of the most popular introductions to the law and its study. Llewellyn introduces students to what the law is, how to read cases, how to prepare for class, and how justice in the real world relates to the law. Although laws change every year, disputes between people haven't altered all that much since Llewellyn first penned The Bramble Bush, and the process of moving from private dispute to legal conflict still follows the patterns he described. Moreover, the steps of a legal dispute, from arguments to verdict, to opinion, to review, to appeal, to opinion have changed little in their significance or their substance. Cases are still the best tools for exploring the interaction of the law with individual questions, and the essence of what law students must learn to do has persisted. If anything, many of the points Llewellyn argued in these lectures were on the dawning horizon then but are in their mid-day fullness now. Sorry, there are no customer reviews written for this item.
|