European University Institute Library

Richard Posner, William Domnarski

Label
Richard Posner, William Domnarski
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 259-289) and index
resource.biographical
individual biography
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Richard Posner
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
934432755
Responsibility statement
William Domnarski
Summary
Judge Richard Posner is one of the great legal minds of our age, on par with such generation-defining judges as Oliver Wendell Holmes, Learned Hand, and Henry Friendly. A judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit and the principal champion of the enormously influential law and economics movement, Posner is also an archetypal public intellectual: he writes provocative best-selling books, receives frequent media attention, and often engages in high-profile policy debates. He is also a member of an increasingly rare breed - judges who write their own opinions rather than delegating the work to clerks. Therefore we have unusually direct access to the workings of his mind and judicial philosophy. In the first full-length biographical treatment of Richard Posner, William Domnarski examines the life experience, personality, academic career, jurisprudence, and professional relationships of his subject with depth and clarity. The book benefits from Domnarski's access to Posner himself and to Posner's extensive archive at the University of Chicago. In addition, Domnarski interviewed and corresponded with more than two hundred people Posner has known, worked with, or gone to school with over the course of his career, from grade school to the present day. They include his fellow former members of the Harvard Law Review, colleagues at the University of Chicago, former law clerks over Posner's more than thirty years on the United States Court of Appeals. Accessible and authoritative, Richard Posner is also a fascinating intellectual biography of a unique judge who, despite never having sat on the Supreme Court, has nevertheless dominated the way law is understood in contemporary America."--, Provided by Publisher
Table Of Contents
1. The first thirty years (1939-1969) -- 2. University of Chicago Law School professor (1969-1981) -- 3. Making his judicial mark and challenging others (1982-1989) -- 4. Law assaulted and pragmatism asserted (1990-1999) -- 5. Public intellectual (2000-2009) -- 6. Push for change and measurement taking (2010-2014)
Content
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