Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Duncan Kennedy is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Duncan Kennedy.


European Law Journal | 1997

The Paradox of American Critical Legalism

Duncan Kennedy

Duncan Kennedys essay is a reprint from his recently published book. We hope to draw attention to Kennedys work among students of European integration since we believe his analysis to be relevant both to the specific debate on the impact of European integration upon private law and to comparative legal study in general. European legal scholarship has only recently begun to examine the problems of private legal integration. The late appearance of private law in the integration arena is due to a primarily instrumental understanding and strategic use of law in the European market‐building project: only once legal ‘barriers to trade’ were eliminated and national regulatory law replaced by Europeanised norms, did the degree to which the core institutions of ’private‘ law had been (indirectly) affected by the integrationist logic become apparent. Comparative legal research, however, has benefited from this awakening of interest. European Commission projects have widened the scope of and intensified comparative studies in Europe. Equally, experience gained from the ‘Integration Through (Public) Law’ project has led to a new private legal debate on the impact of national traditions, the concept of legal cultures and the social functions of private law. Accordingly, whilst Duncan Kennedys deliberations on the history of American legal thought and the differences between American and European legal cultures are generally to be commended for their sensitive treatment of the specificities of the civil law system and the common law heritage, they are equally of particular topical concern since in addition to highlighting Americas ‘utter faith and utter distrust in law,’ they also investigate the fundamentally different approaches adopted towards ‘the project law’ within each of the member states of the EU. If European private lawyers are to come to terms with the problems of integration and convergence, they must first tackle these deep‐seated divergences between their own national legal cultures.


Transnational legal theory | 2014

The Past and the Future of the Legal Left—Celebrating Duncan Kennedy's Scholarship

Duncan Kennedy

Abstract In this article, the author describes his experience of trying to combine modest left legal activist work with more ambitious left academic organising work and left legal theorising, all in the context of American Critical Legal Studies.


Harvard Law Review | 1976

Form and Substance in Private Law Adjudication

Duncan Kennedy


Stanford Law Review | 1984

Roll over Beethoven

Peter Gabel; Duncan Kennedy


Journal of Legal Education | 1982

Legal Education and the Reproduction of Hierarchy.

Duncan Kennedy


Journal of Legal Education | 1986

Freedom and Constraint in Adjudication: A Critical Phenomenology.

Duncan Kennedy


Stanford Law Review | 1981

Cost-Benefit Analysis of Entitlement Problems: A Critique

Duncan Kennedy


University of Pennsylvania Law Review | 1982

Stages of the Decline of the Public/Private Distinction

Duncan Kennedy


Archive | 2004

Legal Education and the Reproduction of Hierarchy: A Polemic Against the System

Duncan Kennedy


Yale Review of Law and Social Action | 1971

How the Law School Fails: A Polemic

Duncan Kennedy

Collaboration


Dive into the Duncan Kennedy's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Justin Desautels-Stein

University of Colorado Boulder

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Naomi Mezey

Georgetown University Law Center

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge