The Mind and Method of the Legal
Academic
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SMITS 9780857936547 PRINT.indd ii   13/08/2012 08:19
            The Mind and
            Method of the Legal
            Academic
            Jan M. Smits
            Maastricht University, The Netherlands
            Edward Elgar
            Cheltenham, UK • Northampton, MA, USA
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              © Jan M. Smits 2012
              All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,
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                                                                                                  04
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           Contents
           Preface                                                  viii
           Introduction: a discipline in crisis?                      1
                   1.   An identity crisis                            1
                   2.   Legal science at the crossroads               4
                   3.   A rediscovery of the legal approach?          6
                   4.   Structure of the argument                     7
           I     Legal science: a typology                           8
           1.    Introduction                                        8
                   5.   Four types of legal scholarship              8
           2.    Descriptive legal science                          11
                  6.    Introduction                                11
                  7.    Description: the doctrinal approach         13
                  8.    Systematization                             15
                  9.    Normative consequences of systematization   17
                 10.    An internal perspective                     20
                 11.    Description in legal science: alternative
                        approaches                                  21
                 12.    Sociological description of law             22
                 13.    Economic description of law                 23
                 14.    Historical description of law               24
                 15.    Comparative description of law              25
           3.    Empirical legal scholarship                        28
                 16.    Research on the effects of law              28
           4.    The theoretical perspective                        32
                 17.    Research about law                          32
           5.    What is next?                                      34
                 18.    Continuing the debate                       34
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              vi                    The mind and method of the legal academic
              II    The Homo juridicus: towards a redefinition of
                    normative legal science                                     35
              1.    Introduction                                                35
                    19.    Course of the argument                               35
              2.    What makes an academic discipline?                          35
                    20.    Academic disciplines                                 35
                    21.    Requirements of an academic discipline               37
                    22.    Requirements of (descriptive) legal science          39
              3.    Normative legal science: in search of the Homo
                    juridicus                                                   41
                    23.    The legal perspective                                41
                    24.    Away from the normative haze                         43
                    25.    The need for an external normative perspective       44
                    26.    Other normative disciplines                          47
              4.    Law as spontaneous order                                    48
                    27.    Theoretical background                               48
                    28.    Some consequences                                    51
                    29.    What is next? What is legally required?              57
              III Methodology of normative legal science                        58
              1. Law as the discipline of conflicting arguments                 58
                    30.    Introduction                                         58
                    31.    Structure of this chapter                            59
                    32.    Searching for the stone of wisdom                    60
                    33.    What ought to be? The doctrinal approach             61
                    34.    What ought to be? The role of Law and Economics      62
                    35.    What ought to be? The empirical approach             66
                    36.    What ought to be? Fundamental rights as
                           cornerstones                                         70
                    37.    Intermediate conclusion: normative uncertainty is
                           both inevitable and desirable                        73
              2.    Towards an empirical-normative approach                     74
                    38.    Are personal preferences decisive?                   74
                    39.    The empirical-normative method                       76
                    40.    An argumentative discipline                          81
                    41.    Example: the Draft Common Frame of
                           Reference for European Private Law                   83
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                                              Contents                      vii
                  42.    Legal science not about finding universal
                         principles                                         85
                  43.    When should there be uniformity of law?            88
                  44.    Emphasis on deciding cases; practical wisdom       91
                  45.    The importance of legal doctrine                   93
                  46.    Which argument prevails? Comparison without
                         a tertium                                          95
            3.    Conclusions                                               97
                  47.    Summary                                            97
                  48.    Normative scholarship as an academic discipline    98
            IV Organization of the legal-academic discourse                100
            1. Introduction                                                100
                  49.    Debate about organization                         100
            2.    Innovation in legal science                              101
                  50.    The importance of creativity                      101
                  51.    Innovative research: many types                   104
                  52.    Is there progress in legal science?               106
            3.    Legal science and methodology                            109
                  53.    Introduction                                      109
                  54.    Research methods and law                          110
                  55.    Making choices explicit                           114
                  56.    A need for an explicit research question?         116
                  57.    Methodological pluralism                          119
            4.    The research culture in legal academia                   122
                  58.    Introduction                                      122
                  59.    Research programmes                               123
                  60.    The market and the importance of fundamental
                         research                                          127
                  61.    An alternative approach                           133
                  62.    Consequences for legal education                  141
            Synopsis                                                       149
                  63.    Four claims                                       149
            References                                                     152
            Index                                                          175
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              Preface
              This book deals with the aims, methods and organization of
              legal scholarship. This theme has received a lot of attention in
              the last few years but the primary goal of this work is not to
              offer an elaborate overview of these recent discussions, which
              have taken place in various countries. Instead, the following
              pages offer a – sometimes personally inspired – essay on the
              diverse aspects of doing academic work in the field of law. The
              core of the argument is that legal science should primarily deal
              with the ‘ought’ question: ‘What is it that people and organi-
              zations are legally obliged to do?’ This question cannot be
              answered by mere reference to national legislation or case law,
              but should always be based on arguments derived from other
              sources. This makes the legal discipline a highly international
              one: it does not deal with the positive law of one or more juris-
              dictions, but with what is law in general. The many conclu-
              sions that follow from this abstract summary will be discussed
              in much detail in this book. It deals with questions such as,
              ‘What is the core of the legal approach?’ and, ‘To what extent
              does the law meet the requirements of an academic disci-
              pline?’ and addresses the organization and assessment of legal
              research and the importance of debate.
                 It was a pleasure to write this book. Having worked in
              various law schools in the past twenty years, I felt the need to
              proffer my own views of legal scholarship. This led to insights
              that were sometimes surprising even to myself. I hope that
              readers will find in this book some of the inspiration that I
              experienced while writing it although, to be frank, some may
              say that I conceded too much to Herman Melville’s well-
              known aphorism that it is better to fail in originality than to
              succeed in imitation.
                                             viii
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                                        Preface                            ix
              I was able to test the thoughts laid down in this book at meet-
           ings in Helsinki (KATTI, 21 March 2007), Montréal (McGill
           Round Table on Legal Education, 27–28 September 2007),
           Maastricht (Conference Methods of Human Rights Research,
           24 November 2007), Florence (EUI, 26 November 2007),
           Stellenbosch (STIAS, 6–8 December 2007), Tilburg (Research
           Group on Methodology of Law and Legal Research, 4 March
           2008), Utrecht (SIM, 8 April 2008), Rovaniemi (conference on
           30 years of legal education in the University of Lapland, 16
           March 2009), Lammi (Nordic Graduate School, 19–20 March
           2009) and London (Centre for Transnational Legal Studies,
           20 April 2011). An amended Dutch version of this book
           (published as Omstreden Rechtswetenschap) was presented at
           Tilburg University on 25 November 2009 by way of comments
           made by Monica Claes, Jan Vranken, Eric van Damme and
           Edgar Du Perron. I profited a great deal from these meet-
           ings, as I did from the comments made by Christa Dubois,
           Jaap Hage, Jaakko Husa, Milan Janco, Mark Kawakami,
           Eric Tjong Tjin Tai and Jan Vranken. Mark Kawakami also
           provided excellent language editing.
                                                      Maastricht, May 2012
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           Introduction: a discipline in crisis?
           1.    An Identity Crisis
           Traditional legal scholarship is under pressure. In several
           countries around the world, a debate has evolved about the
           aims and methods of the academic study of law. There are
           various aspects to this debate. One question is, what should
           legal academics be concerned with: the traditional study of
           legislation and case law and its accommodation in the legal
           ‘system’ (an activity that is increasingly regarded as lacking in
           creativity), or with much more elevated themes? Another ques-
           tion is about the methods that should be used in legal research
           and how this research should be assessed, prompting the ques-
           tion, which research is ‘better’ and why should this be the case?
           There have also been pleas to organize the legal discipline
           more in line with other fields, including the introduction of
           rigorous peer review and the classification of journals. Finally,
           some have made the claim that legal academics should also be
           substantively more oriented towards other fields (in particular
           the social sciences) and that legal scholarship should develop
           as an international discipline instead of one primarily dealing
           with only one national law.
                This debate is taking place in several European countries and,
                in particular, in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands.
                According to Becher (1989, 30), legal academics are seen by their
                other colleagues in the university as ‘not really academic. (.  .  .)
                Their scholarly activities are thought to be unexciting and uncrea-
                tive, comprising a series of intellectual puzzles scattered along
                “large areas of description”’. Twining (1994, 141) characterizes
                the traditional academic approach to law as ‘narrow, conserva-
                tive, illiberal, unrealistic and boring’, with too much attention
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             2                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                 being given to technical details and too little to the ‘big’ questions.
                 In the Netherlands, the discussion is at least partly the result of
                 the financial consequences attached to the uncertain status of
                 the legal discipline: lawyers often have difficulty in convincing
                 representatives of other disciplines, university administrators
                 and funding organizations of the quality of their work. See,
                 for a similar debate in Germany: Ipsen (2005), Engel & Schön
                 (2007), and Bernhart (2008); and for a general perspective on
                 methodology, Van Hoecke (2011). In France, a related discussion
                 is taking place about the merits of doctrinal work: see Jestaz &
                 Jamin (2004); Pimont (2006); and Muir-Watt (2011). Van Gestel
                 and Micklitz (2011) make the claim that doctrinal legal research
                 should be revitalized.
             The debate about the aims and methods of legal scholarship
             is not limited to Europe. While, in several European coun-
             tries, the academic study of law is often seen as not academic
             enough, the usual criticism in American law schools is that
             there is too much attention to theory and interdisciplinarity in
             teaching and research.
                 The starting point for this debate in the United States is arguably
                 the well-known article written by Judge Harry T. Edwards (1992),
                 in which he fulminates about the gap between legal practice and
                 the, in his view, often irrelevant and mediocre interdisciplinary
                 work published in the more prestigious law reviews. In addition,
                 he argued that future lawyers will no longer receive an adequate
                 legal education that prepares them to practice law as the national
                 law schools have been moving towards educating academics
                 instead of lawyers. According to Edwards (1992, 56), however,
                 ‘“personal fascination” is not a justification for scholarship, of
                 any kind’. Deborah Rhode (2002, 1340) also complains that too
                 much legal research is not done well: ‘it exhaustively exhumes
                 unimportant topics or replicates familiar arguments on important
                 ones’.
             Although the debate about aims and methods of academic
             work in law has received new impetus in the last decade, it
             is not a new discussion. At least since the beginning of the
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                                          Introduction                            3
           nineteenth century, the tocsin has sounded over the status of
           the legal discipline. Well-known are the cries of distress by
           Von Kirchmann (‘The Worthlessness of Jurisprudence as a
           Body of Knowledge’) in 1848 and by Lundstedt (‘The Non-
           Academic Character of the Legal Discipline’) in 1932. In the
           Netherlands, it was Taco Mulder who, in 1937, published
           a brochure with the title ‘I Accuse the Faculty of Law of
           Being Non-Academic’. While the arguments of these authors
           are diverse, they all enter into combat with traditional legal
           scholarship.
               The plea of Von Kirchmann in 1848 best fits the present discus-
               sion: its main point is that legal science differs from most other
               academic disciplines because it is the ‘maid of the coincidence’
               as it primarily deals with solving uncertainties and gaps in the
               positive law. This makes jurists – in Von Kirchmann’s figurative
               language – like worms that live only from the putrid wood in the
               positive law, in his view a situation fatal to the academic character
               of jurisprudence. In his famous words: ‘As the science makes the
               coincidental its article, it becomes coincidental itself; three words
               changed by the law-maker, and whole libraries become rubbish’
               (p. 24).
                  Lundstedt’s criticism on the other hand is inspired by a specific
               (empirical) view of science: because legal academics deal with
               justice, and justice is not an observable phenomenon, it is not real
               science. The only thing possible is then a ‘positive science of law’
               (Adolf Merkel). Others (including those adhering to Austin’s ana-
               lytical legal philosophy), however, have fundamentally disputed
               this view of what makes a field academic.
           It is important to make clear what this criticized ‘traditional’
           legal science is really about. The criticism is usually directed to
           the doctrinal approach, in which rules, principles and case law
           are considered from the internal perspective and in which law
           is looked at as being in a relatively autonomous relation to the
           social, economic and political reality. It is the positive law as
           given by legislatures and courts that forms the starting point
           for any meaningful analysis. This positive law can of course
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             4                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             be criticized, but legal academia accepts the bulk of it as given
             and legal practice itself can profit from doctrinal criticism and
             systematization. The search for coherence in the given materi-
             als is thus seen as an important, if not the most important, part
             of academic work.
                  McCrudden (2006, 633) recently described traditional legal
                  science as a discipline of ‘critical reasoning based around authori-
                  tative texts’. Two aspects are important to emphasize. The first
                  is the central role of legislature and the courts: their decisions
                  can be criticized, but in the end their texts do have authority.
                  Cf. Posner (1990, 83): ‘To be blunt, the ultimate ratio of law is
                  indeed force’ and the classic statement by Hobbes in A Dialogue
                  Between a Philosopher and a Student of the Common Laws of
                  England (1681, [2005, 55]): ‘It is not wisdom, but authority that
                  makes a law.’ The second aspect is that this doctrinal approach
                  has its own methodology. Even though it may not be clear what
                  this legal methodology exactly consists of (it entails a certain way
                  of interpretation, systematization and argumentation), there is
                  little doubt that it is an autonomous methodology: reference to
                  other than the own, legal, sources is not needed. Cf. Posner (2002,
                  1316) and Ibbetson (2003, 864), and for the internal perspective
                  also infra, no. 10.
             2.    Legal Science at the Crossroads
             The arguments made above substantiate the conclusion that
             the legal discipline suffers from an identity crisis: not only do
             outsiders accuse legal science of being unacademic, but also
             legal scholars themselves no longer seem to know which disci-
             pline they practice. This crisis is surprising. A midlife crisis it
             cannot be: the academic study of law has existed since the very
             founding of the University in the Middle Ages. What is more,
             empirical science itself originally derived its methods from the
             law, through scholars like Francis Bacon. In the nineteenth
             century, legal science was seen as one of the most important
             achievements of human civilization and even superior to many
             other academic disciplines.
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                                           Introduction                              5
               This was not only true for continental Europe but also in the
               Anglo-American world. David Dudley Field (1859, 13–14) thus
               stated about legal scholarship: ‘Compare this science with any of
               the other sciences; with those which are esteemed the greatest in
               extent, and the most exalted in subject. Take even astronomy, that
               noble science (. . .). Sublime as this science is, it is but the science
               on inanimate matter, and a few natural laws; while the  science
               which is the subject of our discourse governs the actions of human
               beings, intelligent and immortal, penetrates into the secrets of
               their souls, subdues their wills, and adapts itself to the endless
               variety of their wants, motives and conditions’.
           The image that the outside world has of legal academics is
           apparently no longer based on these (or other) merits. The
           general tendency is to say that ‘real’ knowledge cannot be
           based upon conceptual constructions, the finding of coherence,
           or the development of abstract theories (all important parts of
           the ‘internal’ approach to law) but should rest on empirical
           work instead. This was well expressed by the famous theoreti-
           cal physicist, Richard Feynman, when he deemed experiment
           to be ‘the sole judge of scientific truth’. Although this debate
           about the nature of academic work has been in existence since
           the seventeenth century, it seems that law is now much more
           influenced by empiricism than it was in the past.
               One result of this influence is that we now also see a shift
           from traditional legal scholarship towards a more interdisci-
           plinary and empirical approach. It seems that legal science is at
           a crossroads in its long career. As Thomas Ulen states: ‘Legal
           scholarship is on the verge of a dramatically different manner
           of doing routine legal investigation. Put in a nutshell, that
           change is to make law much like the other disciplines in the
           university that believe themselves to be practicing “science”
           (.  .  .)’ What Ulen describes has already largely materialized
           in the United States and is seen by many as an attractive way
           forward for Europe as well.
               See Feynman (1964) and Ulen (2002, 2); cf. Stolker (2003) for
               the Netherlands and Cownie (2004, 72) for the United Kingdom.
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             6                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  This begs the question to what extent the traditional, doctrinal,
                  method of doing academic work in law can survive if other
                  methods of research can claim more recognition from the aca-
                  demic community. Empirical and interdisciplinary work in law
                  (including ‘law and . . .’ approaches) already has a clearly higher
                  status in the United States than doctrinal work. The locus clas-
                  sicus for a survey of this development is Posner (1987). This also
                  means that law is increasingly becoming the domain of econo-
                  mists, philosophers, sociologists and psychologists. McCrudden
                  (2006, 641) sees this development even as ‘(. . .) the growth of an
                  approach to law that may challenge the idea of legal scholarship
                  as a separate craft’. See also, for a possible explanation of this
                  development, Lawrence Lessig (2011).
             3.    A Rediscovery of the Legal Approach?
             The previous sections provide the background for this book.
             The main question addressed in the following section is
             whether traditional legal science is an autonomous discipline
             and, if so, to what extent. Moreover, the question is asked,
             what are the aims and methods of traditional work in law and
             how do they relate to other academic approaches to law and
             to other fields (such as economics and empirical sciences)? The
             answer requires an extensive discussion of various aspects of
             present academic practice as well as a more personal vision
             of what legal research should be about. This means that the
             argument put forward in this book is rather personal.
                  This book is difficult to categorize. It deals with aspects of legal
                  theory, legal methodology and the sociology of science, but also
                  with positive law and policy questions. Examples come mainly
                  (but not exclusively) from the field of private law.
             The main thesis of this book is that the development sketched
             above, in which external approaches towards law get the
             upper hand, is a dangerous one. There is little doubt that the
             law can profit from the insights of other disciplines. However,
             this does not mean that the normative approach towards law
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                                          Introduction                          7
           should be abandoned. On the contrary: the core question
           should not be how other disciplines can help us in making
           the academic study of law more ‘scientific’ but how the legal
           approach itself can better meet the expectations that one may
           have of an academic discipline. Put in a somewhat paradoxical
           manner: there is every reason to rediscover the legal approach
           to the law.
                The idea that legal academics should primarily look at other dis-
                ciplines for a recalibration of their field is widespread. Richard
                Posner is closely associated with this view. Cf. infra, no. 25.
           4.    Structure of the Argument
           Before discussing my own view of what legal science is about,
           it is useful to describe the various types of legal scholarship
           that are feasible. Chapter I describes these types of research
           by looking at their aims and methodology. Chapter II is
           devoted to what is, in my view, the main aim of legal scholar-
           ship: to reflect upon the normative question of what the law
           ought to be. Chapter III builds upon this view by going into
           the accompanying methodology. To conclude, Chapter IV is
           devoted to a discussion of the main consequences of this view
           for the organization of legal research and teaching, and for
           the value of creative research and methodology. The synopsis
           revisits the claim that legal science is in a state of crisis: the
           arguments presented throughout the book will allow us to
           exhibit a definitive answer to the question and to the extent of
           the predicament.
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             I.       Legal science: a typology
             1.     INTRODUCTION
             5.    Four Types of Legal Scholarship
             It is clear that the term ‘legal scholarship’ covers many differ-
             ent types of research. And yet, there is only paltry discussion
             about how to categorize the various research efforts in law.
             This chapter aims to distinguish between ways of doing legal
             research on the basis of the questions one can ask about the
             law.
                  The classification of legal research can also be based on other cri-
                  teria. A common one is to follow the ever-increasing subdivisions
                  within the legal field. In so far as the existence of separate profes-
                  sorial chairs and law journals is a criterion for qualifying a field as
                  a separate sub-discipline, one can only conclude that many new
                  fields have emerged in the last fifty years. Everything that, until
                  the 1950s, was often covered by only one chair on private law
                  now tends to be cut up into separate fields of contract law, tort
                  law, property law, land law, family law, company law (often again
                  split up into corporate governance, transport law, insurance
                  law, intellectual property law, and so on), and insolvency law.
                  An alternative to this is the so-called functional fields approach,
                  where the laws are categorized according to some societal issue,
                  as in the case of social law, construction law and environmental
                  law, or in line with a certain category of people, as in consumer
                  law, juvenile law, migration law and the field of law and feminism.
                  These categorizations have little relevance to questions about
                  the aim and method of legal research for they only deal with the
                  substantive matter of what is being investigated, and not with
                  the investigation itself.
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                                   Legal science: a typology                     9
           Four questions can be asked about law.
           1. How does the law read? The aim of this type of scholarship
              is to describe. This does not necessarily have to be the law
              of one’s own jurisdiction as it stands today: it is also possi-
              ble to describe the contract law of the province of Holland
              in the seventeenth century or the present-day criminal law
              of Singapore. A large part of traditional legal science deals
              with the description of the positive law.
           2. How ought the law to read? Next to describing the law, legal
              academics deal with the normative question of how the law
              should read. It is quite common to find in an article or a book
              both descriptions and judgements, together, about how the
              law ought to read. A commentary on a judicial opinion will
              usually not only describe it in the light of the ‘system’ of law,
              but it will also criticize it and indicate how things could be
              done differently. I will claim that the normative question is
              at the core of legal science but that, in answering the ques-
              tion, legal academics over-emphasize the role of present-day
              law in their analysis (see infra, Chapter II).
           3. What are the consequences of applying a certain legal rule?
              This question leads on to the effect of law on society. This,
              so-called, empirical legal science is becoming increasingly
              popular among academics.
           4. What is law? When is it valid and how does it develop?
              These questions are about the (political and moral) legiti-
              macy of law, its relationship with other normative systems
              (such as morality) and the influence of factors like history,
              society and economy on the development of law. This
              type of scholarship usually tries to explain the law from an
              external perspective. Philosophy of law and legal theory
              are the fields that traditionally deal with this.
               It should be noted that philosophy of law can be both descriptive
               and normative. Rubin (1996, 571) shows that H.L.A. Hart’s The
               Concept of Law (1997) of 1961, which was written as a textbook
               for first year students, only pretends to describe the existing law,
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             10                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  while Finnis’ Natural Law and Natural Rights (1980) clearly
                  shows how the existing legal system should be changed.
             I emphasize that this classification of legal questions into dif-
             ferent types of ‘research agendas’ is not the sole conceivable
             method. A common distinction is the one that is made between
             research into the positive law and into interdisciplinary and
             multidisciplinary research. While the first is directed to the
             study of the present law, interdisciplinary research crosses
             the boundaries between the law and other disciplines (as legal
             history and legal anthropology have done for a long time and
             as the newly established fields of Law and Economics, and Law
             and Psychology also aim to do). The less ambitious multidis-
             ciplinary research does not aim to investigate a topic in a truly
             integrated manner but merely looks at a question from differ-
             ent angles. These approaches are in my view mere methods of
             research that can be brought into action for all types of research
             agenda. Thus, a description of the positive law can take place
             by making use of a ‘black letter’ approach, but can also be done
             in a multidisciplinary way (see infra, no. 11 ff.). In the same
             way, the normative question about the ‘ought’ can be answered
             both by looking at the positive law (What ought to be, accord-
             ing to the law in force?) and in a more fundamental way (What
             ought the law to be like if we leave the positive law aside?).
                  Rubin (1996, 562; cf. McCrudden 2006) makes use of a similar
                  classification. In the social sciences it is more common to make
                  classifications of types of research questions. They usually
                  distinguish between four types of research (Ruane, 2005, 12 ff.):
                  ●   exploration: the discovery of new data. This usually leads to
                      so-called qualitative information: data that can be described
                      in words;
                  ●   description: description of a phenomenon or of an experiment.
                      In social science this is often (though not exclusively) put in
                      quantitative terms;
                  ●   explanation: the search for explanations of what has been
                      described;
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                                      Legal science: a typology                     11
                ●    evaluation: the search for the practical results that the research
                     can have.
                This classification has only limited value for legal scholarship.
                This is because research in law is usually not directed to a
                description or explanation of facts, but rather aims to dispute
                ideas (see infra, Chapter III). A fine overview of the enormous
                diversity of legal research is offered by Siems (2008), on which
                infra, no. 51.
           The next three sections deal with three of the research agendas
           identified above. In each section, we will also ask which
           methods can be used to follow these agendas. Because of the
           great importance of the second question (the normative ques-
           tion of how the law ought to read), this one will be discussed
           separately in Chapter II.
           2.       DESCRIPTIVE LEGAL SCIENCE
           6.       Introduction
           This section is devoted to so-called descriptive legal science,
           usually seen as a synonym for a legal doctrinal approach or
           for legal systematization: the systematic description of the
           law in a certain field. This type of legal scholarship is often
           no longer regarded as particularly prestigious. And yet, it is
           the type of work that most closely resembles the perception of
           scientific method in other disciplines and that is still practiced
           most commonly at law faculties in Europe and elsewhere.
           Insight into the purpose of this activity and its accompany-
           ing method can help in ascertaining whether this approach is
           rightly criticized or not.
              There is not one academic discipline that can do without a
           proper description of its research object. In physics, objects are
           usually described by a quantification of their characteristics
           and behaviour. In the study of history, the objects of study
           range from countries to persons to objects that are usually
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             12                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             described in qualitative terms. In psychology, people’s behav-
             iour is studied and its description takes place on the basis of
             both statistical and qualitative data.
                  Simon Schama’s The Embarrassment of Riches (1987) provides a
                  fine example of ‘description’ in the field of history. It uses a wide
                  range of methods, including the cultural-historical and compara-
                  tive method, and is written in a literary style, leading to a type of
                  creative non-fiction that lies in between literature and scholarship.
                  I mention this example because it shows how every description is
                  subjective and to a large extent dependent on the person making
                  the description. In the field of the humanities, it is usually not the
                  dry summarization of facts or data that is valued, but rather the
                  stylistically advanced presentation of facts in a story, which is also
                  reflected in the appreciation of authors like Schama and Johan
                  Huizinga.
             A proper description of the research object is not possible
             without a shared disciplinary framework for what such a
             description should look like. Textbooks in many fields pay
             attention to this. Thus, physics employs a wide arsenal of
             symbols, terms and formulas to describe the physical reality.
             In psychology, description usually takes place in both quan-
             titative and qualitative terms. History studies employ a wide
             range of different methods.
                  An accurate description of what is observed is of paramount
                  importance in physics: the attempt to explain the observations
                  comes only after an accurate description has been established.
                  For example, see, for (usually mathematical) description, Riley
                  & Hobson (2006). See, for psychology (in which description –
                  through case studies or surveys – stands next to the experimental
                  method and the method to correlate phenomena with each other),
                  Shaughnessy et al. (2011), for example. Studies in fields such as
                  history or literature have witnessed an extensive level of debate
                  about methodology since the 1970s. In addition to textual analy-
                  sis and comparative methods, literature studies have since added
                  empirical studies to their methodology. See Guerin et al. (2010)
                  for more details.
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                                    Legal science: a typology                 13
           7.    Description: The Doctrinal Approach
           This survey of how description takes place in other fields
           forms the background to how law can be described. In the
           remainder of this section, I will first discuss the usual way of
           describing the positive law (nos. 7–10) and will subsequently
           go into several alternative approaches (nos. 11–15).
              Descriptive legal science is usually equated with a doctrinal,
           black letter or dogmatic approach. The usual aim of this type of
           description is to present the law in a certain field (such as con-
           tract law or administrative law) in a way that is as neutral and
           consistent as possible in order to inform the reader how it actu-
           ally reads. Examples of this include the description of German
           private law in the Münchener Kommentar zum Bürgerlichen
           Gesetzbuch, of English constitutional law in Dicey’s An
           Introduction to the Law of the Constitution and of American
           law in the big treatises. Von Savigny’s monumental System of
           the Modern Roman Law (1840–1848 [1979]) also belongs to this
           type of scholarship. They are all informed by a desire to place
           the prevalent sources of law (including legislation and case law)
           in a system and to develop this system further.
              The examples given make it clear that it would be wrong
           to identify this approach as non-creative. Descriptive legal
           science, to the contrary, requires many choices to be made,
           from the selection and the interpretation of the materials to
           the way in which the materials are presented. Jeremy Bentham
           was right when he designated this type of academic work as
           ‘expository jurisprudence’ (as opposed to ‘censorial juris-
           prudence’, dealing with the question of how the law ought
           to read). The term ‘expository’ accurately indicates that this
           description, as with any presentation, requires the making of
           choices and the proper elaboration of these choices.
                See Bentham (1789, [1970 Ch. XVII, 21]). Twining (1994, 123,
                131ff.) also mentions Blackstone’s Commentaries as an important
                example of the expository tradition in law and rightly emphasizes
                that ‘even the lowest forms of exposition involve interpretation,
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             14                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  selection and arrangement of quite elusive data’. Also, the prepa-
                  ration of restatements of law (such as those published by the
                  American Law Institute (ALI)) and of the principles of European
                  private law (as in the European Civil Code project) may seem
                  only to serve to describe what already exists (for the sake of sim-
                  plification, as the ALI explicitly aims to do) but, in practice, the
                  formulation of restatements requires many normative decisions,
                  such as deciding which specificities of the jurisdictions involved
                  are to be left out and which are to be elevated to general prin-
                  ciples. This is because the sources will almost always contradict
                  each other. In this respect legal academics do not differ from his-
                  torians: as historians who claim to describe the historical reality in
                  fact make history, legal academics lay down what is the applicable
                  law. This does not mean that each description is as original as one
                  would wish for. The coherent presentation of new materials or the
                  categorization of old materials on the basis of new criteria require
                  much more brainpower than the mere accommodation of recent
                  legislation and judicial decisions in the existing system. If legal
                  scholarship were fairly criticized for doing only the latter (which
                  is, in my view, less and less the case), this would be merited: jurists
                  employed by universities should be more ambitious than only to
                  want to fit new materials into an existing framework (cf.  infra,
                  no. 8).
             Until recently, the ability to do this type of traditional exposi-
             tory work was seen as the best method to distinguish good
             lawyers from bad ones, although arguably some aspects of
             this thought still persist in many countries around the world.
             This is not surprising: Rubin rightly points out that if the pre-
             dominant way of thinking about law is a positivist one, or is
             based on some idea of natural law, describing the existing law
             in terms of underlying principles or rules forms the only real
             legal science. According to this particular view of the law as
             a system, the emphasis lies on description and legal scholars
             should refrain from making normative statements about how
             the law should be.
                  See Rubin (1996, 565): ‘the comprehensive treatise was regarded
                  as the apogee of scholarly attainment’. This type of work is
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                                    Legal science: a typology                  15
                sometimes qualified as recherches ponctuelles (in contrast to
                recherches sublimes; cf. Twining (1994, 125).
                   A well-known advocate of this type of legal formalism, and
                hence of the internal perspective on law and the systematizing
                method, is Ernest J. Weinrib (1995, 339–340). Weinrib empha-
                sizes that formalism presupposes a view of law as an ‘imma-
                nently intelligible normative practice’. This means that a legal
                system is already justified by its own coherence but will have to
                be permanently readjusted on the basis of new judicial decisions
                and legislation: ‘Justificatory coherence points not outward to a
                transcendent ideal but inward to a harmonious interrelationship
                among the constituents of the structure of justification’. From a
                different perspective, Ronald Dworkin (1986) also points out the
                great importance of this type of coherence. See, on the value of a
                doctrinal approach, also infra, no. 45.
           There are two aspects of this type of description of law
           that have to be worked out: the way in which this descrip-
           tion through systematization really takes place (the method)
           (nos. 8–9), and the inevitably internal perspective that the
           system builder has to adopt (no. 10).
           8.    Systematization
           Which method is used if the law is described as a system? It
           seems useful to distinguish between the creation of a system
           and the accommodation of new elements within this system.
           This distinction is important because once a system is put into
           place and accepted by the legal community, creating a new
           status quo, it will influence the substantive law in the sense that
           deviating from it would prove to be difficult.
              To create a system on virgin territory is without a doubt a
           highly creative activity. Presenting the law as a coherent set
           of concepts, rules and principles by exposing contradictions,
           defining concepts and classifying rules and cases, has defined
           the history of legal scholarship. The well-known Dutch law
           professor and drafter of the new Dutch Civil Code, Eduard M.
           Meijers, described this as the ‘dogmatic method’: the scholarly
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             16                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             cultivation of legal norms or principles on basis of the laws
             of logic: ‘One takes a certain set of law matter as given and
             then tries to make this more complete in form and substance
             without using any other empirical knowledge’.
                This systematizing method comes close to what is common
             in the natural sciences: the existing materials (produced by
             legislatures, courts and others) are described in order to make
             them easier for readers to understand, and also to make
             their outcomes more predictable. These legal descriptions thus
             make it easier for readers to criticize existing materials and to
             analyse their impact in a similar manner to the way the laws
             of natural science can be exposed and criticized on the basis
             of an observation of facts. Cicero was already describing this
             working method when he answered Catullus’s question on how
             to comprehend the interminable and immense amount of law:
                  ‘These matters Crassus will one day disentangle for us and set forth
                  arranged under heads; for you must know, Catullus, that yesterday he
                  promised us that he would collect under definite heads the common law,
                  at present dispersed in disorder, and would reduce it to an easy system.’
             However, it was not until the sixteenth century before, under
             the influence of humanism and natural law, and parallel to a
             similar development in other fields, a legal mos geometricus
             came into existence.
                  Meijers (1903, 14, 19). It is well known that almost any form of
                  systematization of law was absent in Roman times (see for the
                  citation of Cicero: De Oratore (55 BC [1942 II, xxxiii]). It was
                  through the works of authors like Hugo Donellus (1527–1591)
                  and Jean Domat (1625–1696) that the mass of amorphous rules
                  was systematized into a new legal science, ‘just as scientific, just as
                  dependable and just as certain as the natural sciences of Newton
                  and Copernicus’ (Van der Walt 1995, 402). However, it lasted
                  until the nineteenth century before the axiomatic systematiza-
                  tion of the whole of private law was achieved in the form of the
                  apogee of legal rationality: Von Savigny’s System of the Modern
                  Roman Law (1840–1848 [1979]). In this eight-volume work,
                  all rules found their proper place in the system by way of the
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                                    Legal science: a typology                    17
                empirical-deductive method. It led to abstractions such as the
                legal act (Rechtsgeschäft) and a general theory of contract law.
                Von Savigny himself rightly compared his method to that of
                mathematics: ‘In every triangle (. . .) there are certain data from
                the relations of which all the rest are necessarily deducible: thus
                (.  .  .) the whole triangle is given. In like manner, every part of
                our law has points by which the rest may be given. These may be
                termed the leading axioms. To distinguish these, and deduce from
                them the internal connection, and the precise degree of affinity
                which subsists between all juridical notions and rules, is amongst
                the most difficult of the problems of jurisprudence. Indeed, it is
                peculiarly this which gives our labours the scientific character’
                (Von Savigny 1814 [1831, 38–39]).
           More recent examples of the systematization of fields that had
           until then been uncharted territory are provided by the ‘dis-
           covery’ of the reliance principle by the German author Claus-
           Wilhelm Canaris (1971), the systematization of new types of
           contract by Michael Martinek (1991–1993) and the description
           of the English law of restitution by Peter Birks (1985).
                It may seem surprising that even Richard Posner (2007, 437)
                recognizes the great importance of this type of academic work:
                ‘The messy work product of the judges and legislators requires
                a good deal of tidying up, of synthesis, analysis, restatement,
                and critique. These are intellectually demanding tasks, requiring
                vast knowledge and the ability (not only brains and knowledge
                and judgment, but also Sitzfleisch) to organize dispersed, frag-
                mentary, prolix, and rebarbative materials. These are tasks that
                lack the theoretical breadth or ambition of scholarship in more
                typically academic fields. Yet they are of inestimable importance
                to the legal system and of greater social value than much esoteric
                interdisciplinary legal scholarship.’ Cf., however, infra, no. 50.
           9.    Normative Consequences of Systematization
           It is important to realise that once a legal system is put in
           place – no matter how coincidental its structure may be –
           this system will, to a large extent, determine the outcome of
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             18                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             future descriptions. True, legal academics will always be able
             to produce wholly new legal conceptions and distinctions,
             but this is usually not seen as very fruitful. In the European-
             continental tradition, there is a programmatic desire to con-
             tinue the systematization on the basis of the existing legal
             system. This means that new rules and cases will almost always
             be fitted into the existing categorizations.
                  See Rothacker (1954) and Smits (2002a). This does not mean that
                  the accommodation of new materials does not also contribute to
                  the creation of a system. Legal systems are dynamic: they need to
                  be worked on permanently in the light of the new materials that
                  are produced. However, this always happens within the limits of
                  the system itself: the law is conservative in nature in order to be
                  able to meet the requirements of legal certainty and equality.
             One aspect of this systematization needs to be highlighted.
             Legal systematization differs in one important respect from
             description in other disciplines – it influences the application
             of the law in practice. Because legal academics work on a
             system that is also used in practice, important normative con-
             sequences can follow from this work. This makes the descrip-
             tion of law always normative, even if the person describing it
             is not aware of it. Anyone making use of a coherent system
             will propagate a change of the law if this fits in with the system
             itself. Koopmans describes this as follows:
                  ‘If biologists classify a whale as a mammal instead of as a fish, nothing
                  changes in the world of facts (. . .). But if jurists qualify a barstool as a
                  movable object and not as an immovable, they mean to say that in case
                  of insolvency of the pub owner, it is not the bank that as mortgagee is
                  entitled to the stool, but the brewery (. . .).’
             Any decision to systematize the law in a certain way can thus
             have practical consequences. At least in the continental legal
             tradition, legal science itself can create law.
                  Koopmans (1991, 68). The idea that positive law can be found by
                  academic activity is the product of the nineteenth century. In the
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                                    Legal science: a typology                      19
               natural law tradition of authors like Samuel Pufendorf, the aca-
               demic activity only consisted of classifying what was law already.
               This changed with the emergence of the Begriffsjurisprudenz,
               leading to the system being a source of law itself. Schröder
               (2001, 245) puts it like this: ‘Im 19. Jahrhundert dehnt sie ihre
               Kompetenz auf den Stoff selbst aus’ due to the Kantian idea
               that our knowledge is not dependent on the objective reality, but
               the other way around: objects are the result of our knowledge.
               This opened up the way for an independent legal science that
               developed an ‘inner system’. See also Feinman (1989, 663): ‘how
               we think about law’ and ‘the law we think about’ are not two
               different things: ‘Definition creates reality as much as it orders it.’
           The distinction between describing the law and giving a nor-
           mative judgment about how the law should read is not always
           made in a clear way. Statements about optimal law are often
           given by way of an interpretation of an existing statute or judi-
           cial decision. In so far as courts engage in this practice, this is
           – at least in civil law jurisdictions – understandable from their
           fear to create new law: they would rather cover this up. When
           legal academics mimic this practice, however, their actions
           should be discouraged.
              It should be emphasized that the systematizing method
           leaves open the option of deciding which materials, exactly,
           are to be systematized. Until the nineteenth century, this was
           mostly Roman law, whereas today systematization is mostly
           based on the products of national legislatures and courts.
           This is remarkable, considering that the method of ‘finding’ a
           system in the mass of judicial decisions and statutes was origi-
           nally directed towards the creation of a universal legal science:
           just as a ‘national physics’ could not exist so knowledge of dif-
           ferent national laws was only a means to establish a universal
           discipline.
               At present, we have as many legal systems as countries. It is only
               because of their common historical roots that these jurisdictions
               resemble each other. See, for example, on the idea of a univer-
               sal legal science, Schweber (1999). From the viewpoint of the
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             20                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  requirements that an academic discipline (including the legal dis-
                  cipline) should meet, it is problematic to look at national materials
                  only (and even more so if one looks exclusively at the products of
                  the legislature and courts): see infra, nos. 21 and 39. A more origi-
                  nal approach is one that also takes into account private regulation
                  and rules flowing from European and international lawmak-
                  ers (cf. infra, no. 25) in describing the applicable law – as it, for
                  example, takes place in the ‘global administrative law’ movement.
             10.     An Internal Perspective
             The second aspect of the traditional description of law is that
             it usually takes place from an internal perspective. The biolo-
             gist describing the behaviour of the hedgehog does so in his
             own scientific language and not in that of the hedgehog itself,
             just like the sociologist studying the medical profession does
             not have to be an expert in medical jargon. The literary critic,
             also, does not aim to become a writer himself (at least not
             in most cases). The legal academic, however, makes use of
             exactly the same legal terminology as the object of his study.
             And this is not all. Rubin (using a term of Foucault’s) defines
             this as the ‘unity of discourse’: legal scholars ‘not only analyse
             the work of judges, but they also tend to think of themselves
             as judges, and to speak like judges. They address a court on
             the court’s own terms, offering alternative rationales for the
             decision reached, or arguments why a different decision was
             preferable.’
                  Rubin (1988, 1859ff.). This phenomenon was extensively dis-
                  cussed in the American literature. Learned Hand (1926, 466)
                  described jurists and judges as ‘laborers in the same vineyard’.
                  And what Posner (2002, 1315) stated with regard to American
                  legal academics well into the 1970s is still accurate for their
                  European counterparts: ‘They even dressed like lawyers rather
                  than like professors. They passed easily between the university
                  and non-academic venues such as the courtroom and the govern-
                  ment agency.’ For an account of the close relationship between
                  law-making and learning in Germany: Vogenauer (2006).
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                                    Legal science: a typology                21
           This perspective of the participant is also an inherent part of
           the training of law students: much of the legal curriculum is
           meant to put students in the position of a judge, legislator,
           lawyer or counsel and in fact to make a decision. This perspec-
           tive of the legal academic as involved in the legal process itself
           has for a long time been seen as invariably positive. Weinrib
           even sees the internal perspective as what makes legal scholar-
           ship an autonomous discipline: as soon as it adopts an exter-
           nal (economic, sociological, historical, etc.) perspective, there
           is no longer a legal approach to the problem in question.
               This implies that the legal academic has to find law himself. See
               Weinrib (1995) and Rubin (1996, 562). It is through this internal
               perspective that legal science and practice are closely related:
               someone whose aim in life is to indicate how the law reads or
               ought to read, lends a ready ear to those who have to apply the
               law.
           This internal perspective fits in with the general insight that an
           adequate description of the research object is generally given
           by a researcher who puts himself in the position of the par-
           ticipant. This participant observation is well known from the
           field of anthropology. However, the question must be asked
           whether – in the case of law – this prevailing view does not
           focus too much on the insider’s perspective (see infra, no. 25).
           11.     Description in Legal Science: Alternative Approaches
           Can description of law also take place in other ways than
           through doctrinal analysis? It is beyond doubt that the answer
           must be affirmative: there are many examples of such an
           external description of jurisdictions, that is, a description that
           takes place in other terms than those of the jurisdiction itself.
           This type of description usually makes use of the methods of
           other disciplines, including sociology, anthropology and eco-
           nomics. Comparative law and legal history do seem to make
           use of legal terminology when they describe foreign or past
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             22                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             jurisdictions, but this is due to the way in which these disci-
             plines are usually practised, namely as legal disciplines (that is
             to say from an internal perspective) and not as an exponent of
             the comparative or historical method. I briefly pay attention
             to these other types of description.
                  This survey can be brief because it is not essential to the main argu-
                  ment developed in this book. I also acknowledge that sociologists,
                  economists and historians may not fully recognize their work in
                  this necessary limited sketch. In no. 40, infra, yet another type of
                  description is presented: because of increasing Europeanization
                  of law, there is an increasing need for description not in terms of
                  rules, but by way of arguments.
             12.     Sociological Description of Law
             Since Eugen Ehrlich published his famous Fundamental
             Principles of the Sociology of Law (1913 [1936]), it has been
             clear that the law can be described from a sociological per-
             spective as well as in terms of doctrine. After Ehrlich, it was
             Max Weber who, in Economy and Society (1922 [1946]), dis-
             tinguished between a description in legal terms and a more
             value-free description from an external perspective. To Weber,
             this was a description in rather abstract terms. Thus, one can
             describe law in terms of the values it tries to realize (such as the
             limitation of state power), in terms of the relationship between
             the normative (the aspiration) and the factual (how this aspi-
             ration works out in practice) or as a demonstration of class
             interests. The description of law as governance, which consid-
             ers law as a way to exercise power in a legitimate and coherent
             manner is also prominent.
                  See Weber (1922 [1968]). Llewellyn (1930, 3) described law in
                  terms of dispute resolution: law is ‘what (. . .) officials do about
                  disputes’. On law as governance see, instead of many, Hunt &
                  Wickham (1994, 99ff.). Legal realism also aims at a description
                  of how law ‘really’ works. Holmes approached this from the per-
                  spective of ‘decision analysis’: the question is how decisions about
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                                    Legal science: a typology                23
               law are taken in practice. This puts the ‘bad man’ at the centre
               of attention, who is only interested in how the judge will decide
               his case and bases his (from the moral perspective perhaps rather
               unedifying) behaviour on this. See Holmes (1897, 461): ‘The
               prophecies of what the courts will do in fact, and nothing more
               pretentious, are what I mean by the law’. See for an overview of
               (American) legal realism: Leiter (1996). In the last decade, new
               approaches to legal realism have been proposed in the United
               States. This ‘new legal realism’ proposes to make use of more
               quantitative research methods and encourages legal academ-
               ics to do more fieldwork. See, for example, the special issue of
               Wisconsin Law Review (2005, 335ff.) and the website <www.
               newlegalrealism.org>.
           An important part of the sociology of law deals with the effects
           of rules on society. This type of research usually has a strong
           normative bias and investigates whether the (deficient) func-
           tioning of a rule should have consequences for its acceptance.
           In this regard, the study by sociologists is no longer a descrip-
           tion of law, but actual empirical scholarship (see infra, no. 16).
           13.     Economic Description of Law
           Law can also be described in terms of economic analysis. In
           the discipline of Law and Economics, it is common to distin-
           guish between normative and descriptive (positive) analysis.
           In the (disputed) normative variant, economic analysis deals
           with the question of how the law ought to read (or how sub-
           stantive disputes need to be decided) if it aims at maximizing
           welfare: legal rules are then to be designed in such a way that
           they will promote such welfare. An economic description of
           law only aims to describe and explain the existing law on the
           basis of economic principles. On this issue, Richard Posner
           observes that ‘the common law is best explained as if courts
           were trying to maximise economic welfare’. If this is really the
           case, it shows that large parts of private law and criminal law
           can be understood as pursuing efficiency and have developed
           into systems of welfare maximization.
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             24                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  This approach is based on one of the most influential journal
                  articles ever published: Coase (1960); also see Posner (1983, 4).
                  Posner claims that the ‘rhetoric of opinions’ only leads to cover-
                  ing up the underlying reasons for a legal judgment. Instead, legal
                  education and research should aim at uncovering the true reasons;
                  efficiency then comes out as an important factor (Posner 2003,
                  25). There is thus an economic basis for tort liability, fair trial,
                  compensation for expropriation and the principle against unjusti-
                  fied enrichment (Posner 2003, 27). Economic analysis may also
                  reveal the adverse effects of consumer protection (Posner 2003,
                  27), which demonstrates how description can easily become a
                  normative activity (on which infra, no. 34).
             14.     Historical Description of Law
             One would expect legal historians and comparative lawyers
             to be experienced in describing the law. This is because they
             are supposed to struggle with the question of how past law or
             foreign law can be objectively presented because, at first blush,
             doing this in terms of present law does not suffice.
                And yet, this is exactly the approach that most legal histori-
             ans follow. The Dutch legal historian Henk Hoetink makes a
             distinction between a purely historical approach and a descrip-
             tion on the basis of present-day law. The first approach aims to
             reproduce the law as it really was in order to reflect the histori-
             cal reality that once existed. This means that the conceptions
             and rules of that time are placed in the broader cultural and
             economic context of the past. The second approach departs
             from present-day law, which it extends backwards in order
             to solve modern problems. In this scenario, history is used to
             draw lessons that are applicable to improving current law, not
             to seek the objective restoration of what once was. It is entirely
             plausible then that past law is not presented in an entirely
             correct way but this is of minor significance if we consider that
             a ‘productive misunderstanding’ can be immensely useful.
                  See Hoetink (1929 [1986, 27ff.): in the first approach, legal history
                  is part of cultural history, a study that comes out of ‘disinterested
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                                    Legal science: a typology                   25
               interest’. This purely historical study of law is closely associated
               with the names of Ranke and Mommsen, but modern examples
               of this approach include the works on American legal history
               written by Friedman (1973 [2005]) and Horwitz (1977). In prac-
               tice, legal historians mainly use the second approach, where they
               describe jurisdictions primarily from an internal perspective.
               That is to say by using their own classifications, concepts and
               rules it makes them, above all, jurists and not historians. We find
               a similar debate in comparative legal studies, where a strictly
               academic approach would require the description of a foreign
               jurisdiction on its own terms. However, as comparison can also
               serve other purposes than just accumulating objective knowledge,
               other methods have come to the fore (cf. Husa 2009).
           It is striking to see the near obliviousness or the general lack
           of awareness that many legal historians possess when it comes
           to acknowledging the existence of alternative methods avail-
           able in the field of history when describing the past. This is a
           pity because legal history could profit from these views when
           describing the historical reality in law.
               Comparative lawyers also struggle with questions that simi-
               larly afflict legal historians. See, for example, the overview by
               Ankersmit (2001). Historical description also requires the making
               of choices, which becomes evident in the debate about the
               extent to which there is one European civil law tradition. While
               Zimmermann, in The Law of Obligations (1990), emphasizes
               the continuity of this tradition, Monateri (2000) is much more
               sceptical and sees mostly rifts in history and a discontinuous
               development of Roman law to modern law. This is a matter of
               perspective: one sees continuity when identifying a rule that one
               is liable for selling a defective product but discontinuity if this
               product is a slave in Roman times and a MacBook in the present.
           15.     Comparative Description of Law
           An identical question (‘How to describe another law than
           one’s own?’) is discussed among comparative lawyers. Again,
           one can distinguish between a description in terms of a foreign
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             26                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             jurisdiction and one in terms of one’s own legal system.
             Comparatists, unlike legal historians, quarrel to no end about
             what is the best approach.
                Describing a jurisdiction in the context of that jurisdic-
             tion itself is usually not seen as very problematic since most
             comparative work is directed to comparisons of similar legal
             systems within the same legal family. In such cases, the foreign
             terminology is usually similar to that of one’s own system.
             Even if a term has a different meaning elsewhere, it will not
             be fundamentally different from the meaning attached to it
             in its own jurisdiction so one does not need a truly external
             viewpoint in order to understand the foreign jurisdiction.
                  A well-known exception to this is so-called ‘false friends’ (terms
                  that look identical, but actually have a wholly different meaning)
                  (see Tallon (1998)).
             Things change quickly when foreign law cannot be captured
             in terms of one’s own jurisdiction. Comparative literature
             then usually turns to the so-called functional method: which
             (societal) function does the legal rule or even the legal system
             as a whole have? Different legal rules and legal systems are
             then compared by choosing a standard of measurement that is
             external to the law.
                  A famous example of functional description at the micro level is
                  the article by Konrad Zweigert (1964) about indicia of serious-
                  ness in contract law, where the question is which rules are used
                  to distinguish binding from non-binding promises. It is only
                  from this functional perspective that one is able to relate causa,
                  consideration, and the intention to create legal relationships. It
                  is probably true that the more diverse legal systems are, the more
                  abstract the measure of comparison has to be. Thus, anthropolo-
                  gist Von Benda-Beckmann (1979) distinguishes all law in terms of
                  variations on a general category. This variation can be described
                  in terms of the degree of institutionalization, of mandatoriness,
                  and of restricting the autonomy of individuals. See also Strijbosch
                  (1996, 536). The description of law in terms of so-called ‘law jobs’
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                                    Legal science: a typology                  27
               is also well known: each society has certain (legal) functions,
               such as deciding disputes, regulating behaviour, deciding who
               has authority, determining how such authority is to be exercised,
               and providing cohesion (this method was famously applied to the
               non-state law of the Cheyenne Indians by Llewellyn and Hoebel
               (1941)). Also see Hoebel (1967 [2006]).
                  Describing a foreign legal system in terms of one’s own legal
               system is insofar a Dutch academic tradition that it also took
               place in the so-called ‘Adat school’ of Cornelis van Vollenhoven
               and others. They aimed to codify the ‘living law’ of the peoples of
               the Indonesian archipelago in non-Western terminology. Thus,
               this people’s own conception of their ‘native law’ (as opposed
               to the academic description of it in the terms of the lawyer) was
               emphasized. Van Vollenhoven spoke of ‘seeing oriental law in
               the oriental way’. See Holleman (1981). There was even a manual
               for recording the law in Indonesia, the so-called Adat Guide
               (1910), prescribing the method of research and describing the
               law. In line with his own method, Van Vollenhoven distinguished
               nineteen areas of law (rechtskringen) in the archipelago by way
               of ‘neutral’ neologisms, explicitly avoiding, for example, the dis-
               tinction between property law and the law of obligations, and by
               using terms such as land law (for example, ‘tenancy in return for
               loan’ or grondverpanding) and the law of wrongs (thus avoiding
               the distinction – unknown to Adat law – between acts that are
               criminally punishable and civil law torts).
           The question must be raised whether this functional method is
           truly the best way to compare jurisdictions. Describing a law
           by way of reference to non-legal concepts risks the possibility
           that the reader fails to capture the essence of that law (and
           what it means to those affected by it).
               Nils Jansen draws an important parallel with the study of
               (comparative) religion. This discipline suffers from an identical
               problem as comparative legal science: how to describe (the con-
               ceptions of) a religion in an objective fashion? How, for example,
               does one describe a term like ‘holiness’ or compare the diverse
               views about ‘God’? The personal opinion of the person describ-
               ing the subject cannot be decisive and neither can a functional
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             28                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  approach: to look at religious commandments or view the resur-
                  rection of Christ as functional problems seems to miss the heart of
                  what a religion is about (Jansen 2006, 328). And yet, a compari-
                  son is possible by describing a phenomenon existing in different
                  religions as a common phenomenon, and subsequently analysing
                  the commonalities and differences inherent in it. This means that
                  comparison takes place by way of a ‘comparative second-order
                  language’, which is an inter-subjective description that allows one
                  to decide from the ‘inside out’ what is and is not important. This
                  approach can also be of service in legal comparison: see infra,
                  no. 46 and, for further criticism of functionalism, Husa (2003).
             3.     EMPIRICAL LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP
             16.     Research on the Effects of Law
             A second type of legal science, known as empirical legal science,
             is not directed towards a (doctrinal or other) description of
             law, but deals with its application and consequences. Empirical
             legal science studies the legal actors, institutions, rules and
             procedures in order to obtain a better understanding of how
             they operate and what effects they have. This field is therefore
             not about what the law says, but about what it does. This type
             of work is becoming increasingly popular, partly caused by the
             view that ‘real’ knowledge must be empirically testable.
                  For the above definition, see Baldwin & Davis (2003, 881).
                  Ellickson (2000) demonstrates the extent to which, in the United
                  States, the number of studies at the intersection of law and other
                  disciplines has increased in the last twenty years. For the period
                  1985–2000, Korobkin (2002) counts 27 articles in American law
                  journals using an empirical approach to the law of contract. This
                  number has increased substantially since then: there are now also
                  law journals entirely devoted to an empirical approach, such as the
                  Journal of Legal Studies, the Law and Society Review, the Journal
                  of Law and Society and the Journal of Empirical Legal Studies.
                  Heise (2002) provides a history of empirical legal scholarship.
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                                    Legal science: a typology                   29
           Attention to how a statute or judicial decision affects reality
           is a little surprising for today’s jurists. The days of a purely
           doctrinal approach, in which a judgment about the value of
           a rule was only based on the extent to which it fitted into the
           doctrinal system – if those times ever existed at all – are now
           far behind us. One need not repeat the famous statement that,
           ‘We are all realists now’ to be aware of this.
               This approach has its foundations in the work of Von Jhering,
               Ehrlich and Weber (see supra, no. 12) and in American legal
               realism. Louis Brandeis was one of the first to explain before the
               United States Supreme Court how a statute on the regulation of
               the working hours of women worked out in practice (Muller v.
               Oregon, 208 U.S. 412 (1908) and Roscoe Pound’s Social Control
               Through Law of 1942 subsequently elaborated on this empha-
               sis on ‘law in action’. See extensively Stein (2000, 21) on the
               Folgenanalyse in Germany.
           We must not, however, overestimate the importance of empir-
           ical work to the law. Holmes’ famous saying that ‘for the
           rational study of the law the black-letter man may be the man
           of the present, but the man of the future is the man of statis-
           tics and the master of economics’ did not materialize. This is
           because the relationship between the normative question of
           what the law ought to be (‘What is allowed in law and what
           is not?’) and the empirical question of whether something
           ‘works’ is not completely clear. The premise of empirical
           research is that the law is an instrument and that it can there-
           fore be tested in an empirical way. This implies a strongly
           instrumental view of law that is difficult to reconcile with a
           doctrinal approach. The tension between the two models of
           academic work becomes apparent when the construction of
           a logically coherent system of principles is in the driving seat
           and one that investigates empirical reality (in terms of cause
           and effect) takes a backseat.
               See Holmes (1897, 469). In a doctrinal approach, there is no need
               for an empirical analysis. The only test is whether the rule fits in
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             30                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  with the (coherent) system. This is different as soon as the societal
                  effect of the law starts playing a role in assessing it. Ulen (2002,
                  27) mentions yet another reason: the traditionally marginal role
                  of empirical research in law is also caused by the fact that law does
                  not have a testable core theory. This is different in many other
                  disciplines (such as economics with its emphasis on the rational
                  actor). It should also be mentioned that the ever-increasing role
                  of regulation by the state leads to a greater need for empirical
                  research. If law is primarily used as a policy instrument to pursue
                  certain goals, the empirical testing of the extent to which these
                  goals are achieved is only one step away. See also infra, no. 35.
             The empirical approach was originally strongly directed
             towards identifying factors that determine how judicial deci-
             sions come about. In contrast to doctrinal analysis, it was no
             longer seen to be decisive how the law reads, but a role was
             assigned to the judge in understanding why a decision was
             taken. Today, legal-empirical work is particularly strong in
             the fields of criminal law, labour law, environmental law and
             access to the legal profession.
                  Recently, much attention has been directed towards the consum-
                  ers of legal services (Baldwin & Davis, 2003, 887) and towards
                  negotiations. Perhaps the most talked-about exponent of the
                  empirical approach in the last few years is the American, Steven
                  Levitt, whose work is characterized by the motto that law and
                  morals may be about how one would wish the world to work, but
                  it is more important to know how the world works de facto. How
                  this can lead to exceptionally stimulating research is shown by a
                  much-debated article in which Levitt and Donahue look for an
                  explanation for the reduction of crime in the United States after
                  1990. Their explanation is that the legalization of abortion by
                  the United States Supreme Court in Roe v. Wade (410 U.S. 113
                  (1973)) led to fewer children being born who were unwanted by
                  their parents. Since unwanted children are more likely to become
                  criminals because not enough preparation is put in place for their
                  upbringing, legalization of abortion would have led to less crime
                  (Levitt & Donahue 2001).
                      Next to the very well established field of criminology, there
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                                    Legal science: a typology                    31
               is an increasing need for empirical testing of the regulation of
               private relationships. It has been noted more than once that a
               private law counterpart of criminology is largely missing or, as
               it was put in a report by the British Nuffield Foundation (2006):
               ‘There is no “civilology” equivalent to criminology’, hinting at the
               lack of comprehensive empirical work in fields such as family law,
               commercial law, labour law and contract law. The overview of
               types of research by Siems (2008) demonstrates how many kinds
               of legal-empirical research are possible and that it does not make
               much sense to lump them together. Research into the extent to
               which parties are aware of law (Ellickson 1991) makes a world of
               difference to research into ways of deciding conflicts (Genn 1999)
               and research into the question of whether common law jurisdic-
               tions are better for economic development than their civil law
               counterparts (Shleifer & Glaeser 2002; Faure & Smits 2011).
           It does not come as a surprise that the empirical approach
           derives its methods from non-legal disciplines. Taking empiri-
           cal research seriously requires using the methods of other
           disciplines rather than those of the law to find answers to the
           relevant questions. However, one cannot expect the same type
           of certainty from empirical legal research as, for example,
           natural science can offer: the results are simply less robust –
           which does not mean that these are therefore less important.
               The usual distinction is the one between qualitative and quan-
               titative empirical research methods. The former usually consists
               of conducting interviews, carrying out case studies or reading
               documents. The results of this type of research cannot always be
               generalized, but this does not matter so much because usually the
               aim is to understand a legal phenomenon better and not to collect
               empirical evidence for the sake of collecting data. The quantita-
               tive method can consist of a large-scale collection of data and the
               application of statistical analysis to it, as often happens in crimi-
               nology and victimology. It is also possible to carry out an experi-
               ment, as Hesen (2009, 147ff.) recently did, where she investigated
               the cognitive load of contracts by having 120 students answer
               questions about almost 400 contracts in the biopharmaceutical
               sector.
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             32                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             Baldwin & Davis (2003, 889ff.) show well that empirical
             research in law is often not very thorough when compared to,
             for example, political science or psychology: ‘Research skills
             are picked up by observing more experienced colleagues, and
             there is nothing particularly complex or technical about the
             methods employed’. This is not much of a problem as the
             results are often plausible and influential. Thus, the famous
             work of Macaulay (1963) on the actual use of contract law
             by business people is based on a relatively small number of
             interviews. Also, see infra, no. 55 for putting the robustness of
             empirical data into perspective when used in legal studies.
             4. THE THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVE
             17.     Research about Law
             Next to descriptive and empirical legal scholarship, there is
             still a third type of legal research that can be distinguished.
             This is research about the question of what is law, in what does
             the law differ from other sets of rules, why and when is it valid,
             and how does it develop. Philosophy of law and legal theory
             traditionally deal with these questions, but questions about
             the law are often also raised in other sub-disciplines. This
             meta-legal perspective is only discussed briefly here.
                  This type of research is certainly not limited to the elevated ques-
                  tions that philosophy of law deals with and that are brilliantly
                  described by Bix (2009). Questions about the optimal design
                  of private law (Purnhagen 2013), about the need for a uniform
                  European private law (Smits 2005) and about the influence of the
                  late Spanish scholastics on Hugo Grotius’ views about mistake
                  and unjustified enrichment (Feenstra 1974) also belong to this
                  category.
                     The term ‘meta-legal’ perspective is often used to describe
                  all approaches that are not doctrinal, thus also covering fields
                  such as Law and Psychology, Sociology of Law and Law and
                  Economics. However, these topics are often more directly related
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                                    Legal science: a typology                    33
               to the positive law, that is then looked at from the perspective of
               a specific method.
           The enormous value of the theoretical perspective is that it
           usually does not start from the subdivisions of substantive
           fields of law, but tries to acquire insights relevant to various
           legal areas. The challenge then is to remain informed about
           developments in these specific fields and to make the acquired
           general insights accessible again to specialists, which is no
           easy task. Thus, the present challenge seems to be to find a
           new philosophical foundation for law in times of increasing
           internationalization of law. There is a dire need for a new
           legitimation of law, which will accommodate other legal
           sources than those that fit in with a positivist view, where
           the growing Europeanization and privatization of law make
           it increasingly difficult to determine what is law by making
           use of criteria such as Kelsen’s Grundnorm or Hart’s rule of
           recognition.
               See supra, nos. 27 and 40. There is an extensive literature on the
               consequences of internationalization for conceptions such as the
               rule of law, democracy and sovereignty. In the fields of European
               private law or European constitutional law, the discussion is
               also extensive, but deals mainly with the substance of European
               norms and with the influence they have on national law. A more
               extensive theory of how Europeanization leads to a whole new
               category of ‘law beyond the State’ and how this influences sub-
               stantive fields is largely missing. An inventory of the literature is
               provided by Michaels & Jansen (2006), Jansen & Michaels (2007);
               also see De Burca (2008). For example, the question of the level
               at which laws are best regulated, whether it be at the local, the
               national, the European, or even at the supranational level was not
               addressed until the enormous increase in Europeanization, not to
               mention the alternate possibility that regulation ought to be left
               in the hands of the private sector. The answer to this question also
               determines how the systematization of private law is to take place:
               by way of making one European system or as separate national
               and European systems that each have their own rationality (on
               which Michaels 2011).
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             34                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             Theoretical work can make use of a variety of methods.
             Philosophy of law and legal theory tend to make use of the
             same methods and techniques of argumentation as in the
             more positive fields of law. The research question often also
             invites us to make use of methods (and insights) from other
             disciplines.
                  In particular, theoretical work can profit from the ways other
                  disciplines approach certain questions. Thus, when asking how
                  a legal system develops, inspiration can be derived from evolu-
                  tionary theory, and when asking whether the unification of law
                  is needed, an economic approach can be useful (see respectively,
                  Smits 2002b and 2005).
             5.     WHAT IS NEXT?
             18.     Continuing the Debate
             Three important approaches to doing legal research were dis-
             cussed above. Legal academics can describe law, can ask how
             law works in society, and can deal with theoretical questions
             about the nature and development of law. Each of these activi-
             ties is useful and has its own methods. However, there is still
             a fourth approach to law: as already indicated, supra (no. 4),
             legal academics can also raise the normative question of what
             the law ought to be. This is, in my view, at the core of the legal
             discipline and therefore deserves to be discussed separately.
             The subsequent Chapters II and III are devoted to this type
             of research.
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           II.        The Homo juridicus: towards a
                      redefinition of normative legal
                      science
           1.     INTRODUCTION
           19.     Course of the Argument
           The introduction to this book showed that there is much work
           to be done pertaining to the aims and methods of legal science,
           the impact of which has reached a point where legal academics
           themselves can no longer distinguish the core of their activ-
           ity. This is why, in Chapter I, four questions about the law
           were identified to facilitate legal academics in classifying their
           research. This should not make us forget, however, what is at
           the core of the legal discipline. The main thesis of this book is
           that legal science is primarily formed by the question of how
           the law ought to read. Before elaborating on this point further,
           this chapter will investigate the requirements that an academic
           discipline should meet in general (nos. 20–22). Normative
           legal science is then identified as the core of the legal discipline
           in nos. 23–26, followed by an account of what could be the
           theoretical underpinning of this view (nos. 27–29).
           2.     WHAT MAKES AN ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE?
           20.     Academic Disciplines
           Needless to say, not all academic disciplines are similar.
           This is why the various branches of scholarship are usually
                                            35
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             36                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             distinguished on the basis of their characteristics and methods.
             Thus, the formal (or a priori) sciences are usually contrasted
             with the empirical sciences. Formal sciences (such as math-
             ematics, logic and computer science) study abstract objects
             starting from certain existing axioms and rules of inference.
             The validity of a theory is then completely dependent on these
             axioms: the reality they create is a wholly artificial one. This is
             fundamentally different in empirical sciences (such as physics
             and biology): here, the validity of a theory can be tested
             by way of physical experiment. A third type of discipline is
             formed by the humanities, dealing with the diverse products
             of the human mind.
                  See, for example, Salmon (1999) and Leezenberg & De Vries
                  (2001). Other distinctions within the empirical sciences concern
                  the experimental (physics), observational (astronomy) and
                  interpretative (several subfields of psychology) disciplines. The
                  humanities often do not aim to find the truth or new facts,
                  but  usually search for an alternative perspective on existing
                  facts,  not necessarily leading to the elimination of existing
                  perspectives.
                     Other distinctions within science are also possible, ranging from
                  the age-old to very modern ones. Aristotle already distinguished
                  between theoretical sciences (aiming to obtain ‘pure’ knowl-
                  edge, such as in philosophy), practical sciences (which is about
                  the actions of citizens – law, ethics and political science) and
                  poetical disciplines (pursuing knowledge about making things).
                  National organizations for scientific research (such as the Dutch
                  Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek
                  and the German Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft) often lump
                  together the various social sciences (including law, economics
                  and psychology); cf. infra, no. 53). Another distinction is the one
                  between ‘pure’ science (such as theoretical physics) and applied
                  disciplines (such as mechanical engineering and medicine).
             In this context, there is much debate over the question of how
             to categorize the legal discipline within the various branches
             of scholarship. In my view, this is completely dependent on
             the aim one pursues when studying law: this can make law
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                                      The Homo juridicus                         37
           not only part of the humanities, but can also mean it has to be
           categorized as an empirical or normative discipline.
               The legal discipline belongs to the humanities in so far as it empha-
               sizes that the doctrinal system (‘dogmatics’) and the formulations
               of norms are products of the human mind. The accompanying
               research method is then in many cases the hermeneutical one.
               Law is also an empirical discipline in so far as it deals with how
               rules work in practice (see supra, no. 16). In an extreme variant
               of this, we can only accept as law what ‘works’ (see also infra,
               no. 35). One can even defend the proposition that legal norms
               undergo a similar development to the laws of nature: it may
               be that legal norms cannot be determined by way of induction
               and generalization, but that they have to be accepted in society.
               Looked at it in this way, norms are only hypotheses that become
               valid by their application to the facts (see for example, Engisch
               (1977) and infra, no. 52). Finally, law can also be a normative
               discipline (see infra, Section 3).
           Determining which of the three variants we are dealing with
           is irrelevant when answering the question which requirements
           the legal discipline should meet in order to qualify as an
           academic discipline. The requirements we want an academic
           discipline to meet are independent of the classification of these
           variants.
           21.     Requirements of an Academic Discipline
           The academic disciplines that were just distinguished, no
           matter how diverse they are, have several things in common.
           If a discipline is to be seen as an academic one, it must meet
           certain requirements. First, all scholarly disciplines aim for
           the systematization of knowledge: they are not satisfied with
           a loose collection of data, but aim to describe, evaluate and
           explain information within an existing framework. Secondly,
           this knowledge must have been obtained by a method that
           is recognized as valid by the academic community. Thirdly,
           all disciplines aim for knowledge that supersedes the local:
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             38                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             academic work aims for universal knowledge and is therefore
             necessarily international.
                  See for example Ruane (2005, 10ff.). It is not only (natural) science
                  that aims for the systematization of knowledge; this is true for
                  any academic discipline. The term ‘scientia’ refers to knowledge;
                  and knowledge seems impossible without reference to a number
                  of ordered elements. Hence, the Oxford English Dictionary
                  describes science as a branch of study that is concerned with ‘a
                  connected body of demonstrated truths or with observed facts
                  systematically classified (. . .)’.
                     The subsequent requirement is that knowledge is either
                  obtained through a recognized research method or is at least
                  recognized as part of an academic practice. This methodologi-
                  cal requirement finds its origins in the fact that the knowledge
                  obtained has to be reliable and not based only on an intuition
                  or a feeling: use of an accepted method can thus make the
                  knowledge more objective and minimize the chance of mistake.
                  This does not mean that the method is the same for every dis-
                  cipline. In the natural sciences, the method usually consists of
                  an empirical observation of reality, even though this may not be
                  a guarantee of finding ‘objective’ knowledge. The well known
                  criticism by authors such as Gadamer (1960[1981], Habermas
                  (1968[1987]) and MacIntyre (1981) is that an academic disci-
                  pline can never offer an objective truth, but is at best a practice:
                  a set of forms of argumentation recognized as valid by some
                  academic community (cf. Rubin 1988, 1841). Whereas a method
                  offers fixed rules to reach a certain (often replicable) result, a
                  practice is based on judgments and sometimes even on intuition.
                  The legal discipline has almost always been seen as such a prac-
                  tice, which also explains the relatively low importance that is
                  attached to using clear research methods in academic work. As
                  Rubin (1988, 1859) put it, law is a ‘practice based on judgment,
                  not on methodology based upon objectively determined rules’.
                  Also see infra, no. 54.
                     Finally, academic disciplines aim at generalization. Despite dif-
                  ferences between various fields – well known in this respect is the
                  distinction Rickert makes between generalizing sciences (such as
                  physics) and individualizing disciplines (such as history) – no field
                  can limit itself to describing the here and the now: facts always
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                                     The Homo juridicus                        39
               have to be placed in a broader context in which national borders
               and language are not decisive.
           Sometimes a fourth requirement is added to these three: the
           results must be replicable. This means that by using the same
           research method, a similar result must be reached. However,
           this is not an absolute requirement in all disciplines.
               Even in the natural sciences, the requirement of replicable results
               is no longer as important as it used to be. In fields like quantum
               mechanics and chaos theory, results are often unpredictable
               anyway and it is generally recognized that even in the ‘hard’
               fields, knowledge is the result of a discourse in which rhetorical
               strategies play an important role. See, for example, Latour (1987).
               Outside natural science, the requirement of replication has never
               been that important. In his famous lecture, The Two Cultures of
               1959 [1993], C.P. Snow was already arguing that important dif-
               ferences exist between disciplines and that one should not try to
               transplant the requirements of one discipline into another.
           22.     Requirements of (Descriptive) Legal Science
           There is little doubt that the legal discipline can meet the
           three requirements that were discussed above. How these
           requirements work through is dependent on the type of legal
           science that is at stake: the descriptive, empirical and theo-
           retical approaches will all make their own interpretation of
           the three universal academic requirements. It seems logical
           that the empirical and theoretical approaches cadge from the
           disciplines they originate from. But descriptive legal science
           can also meet the requirements needed to be considered
           academic.
              This is beyond doubt, in so far as systematization and
           generalization are concerned. Existing law is pre-eminently
           described by way of the systematization of (usually) legislation
           and case law. This systematization is aimed at distinguishing
           the aspects of legislation and case law that have a more general
           importance from the less important details.
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             40                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  This type of systematization is not only a matter of course in
                  private law, but also in other fields. See supra, no. 7. A methodo-
                  logical foundation of systematization is offered by for example
                  Bydlinski (2003) and Wilburg (1950); also see infra, no. 55.
                  However, the legal discipline differs from other fields in its empha-
                  sis on the systematization and generalization of local knowledge:
                  the information that is to be systematized is usually confined to
                  national borders. This is understandable in so far as one wants to
                  describe national law. As soon as one’s ambition reaches further,
                  this restriction is no longer justified (such as deciding about what
                  is desirable law, as is the case in normative legal scholarship: see
                  infra, no. 25 and 48.
             Legal science can also meet the requirement that knowledge
             is obtained through a method that the academic community
             recognizes as valid. Rubin rightly describes the legal discipline
             as ‘a practice whose discourse consists largely of prescrip-
             tions that scholars address to public decision-makers for the
             purpose of persuading those decision-makers to adopt speci-
             fied courses of action’. This general description of the legal
             discipline as a whole does not preclude the possibility that the
             descriptive variant has its own methods.
                  See Rubin (1988, 1881) and infra, no. 54. Description of law
                  usually takes place by way of commonly accepted methods. In
                  the doctrinal approach this is the empirical-deductive method as
                  described earlier (no. 8). In the case of the alternative approaches
                  described in nos. 12–15, one ideally consults sociology, economics
                  or history to derive one’s methods.
             There are various reasons why the requirement that results
             should be replicable is not usually an issue in the legal field.
             The most important reason is that, in law, the value judg-
             ments of the researcher are often decisive for the result. In
             other words, the objectivity of natural science is not available
             because of the indeterminate nature of law.
                  Baldwin & Davis (2003, 891) rightly emphasize that ‘there is little
                  enthusiasm for re-testing a “finding” which everyone understands
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                                       The Homo juridicus                        41
                to be subjective to some degree’. See infra, nos. 50ff for a discus-
                sion of what this means for the ‘innovativeness’ of legal science
                and the extent to which legal knowledge is accumulated.
           3.     NORMATIVE LEGAL SCIENCE: IN SEARCH
                  OF THE HOMO JURIDICUS
           23.     The Legal Perspective
           In Chapter I, various academic approaches to the law were
           distinguished. As stated then, the core of legal science is
           formed by the normative question of what the law ought to be.
           The descriptive, empirical and theoretical approaches to law,
           which were previously distinguished, are no doubt prominent
           perspectives – and the latter two have rightly received a lot of
           attention lately – but this should not lead us away from the
           core of the legal discipline and how it differs from other fields.
              In my view, the ultimate question of legal science is what the
           law ought to be: the legal discipline reflects upon what it is that
           individuals, firms, states and other organizations ought to do
           or ought to refrain from doing. Whilst the other three ques-
           tions one can ask about law make use of a method that is also
           used in other disciplines (such as natural science, social science
           and philosophy), the search for the answer to this question is
           unique to the legal discipline. For example, should disinherit-
           ing one’s children be permitted? Should a death penalty be
           imposed for criminal offences? Under what circumstances
           is it justified to go to war? Should constitutional review be
           allowed? Is it legitimate to discriminate in the private sphere?
           May shipwrecked sailors eat their weakest companion if they,
           themselves, are likely, otherwise, to die of starvation? To
           answer these and similar questions is the pre-eminently legal
           approach.
                Because of the focus on this question, legal science is not depend-
                ent on the world of facts, or as Collier (1991, 271) rightly claims:
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             42                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  ‘The true realm and metier of legal scholarship (. . .) is the world
                  of ideas’. It is not description (as in the natural and social sci-
                  ences), interpretation (as in literature studies) or explanations of
                  human behaviour (as in economics), but the normative question
                  about what ought to be in law. Rubin (1988, 1847) speaks of the
                  ‘prescriptive voice’ and the subtitle of the book by Michael Sandel
                  (2009) on justice (What’s the Right Thing to Do?) is also telling; cf.
                  also Von Wright (1971). It is worth repeating in order to avoid
                  misunderstanding – description, interpretation and explanation
                  are most certainly part of legal science, but in my view they are
                  not part of its normative core.
             It is noticeable that this core of the legal discipline is only
             rarely made explicit. In every academic discipline, there are
             one or two core questions that every student can easily name.
             In physics, it is how to understand the physical reality, and in
             biology it is how living organisms function, grow and develop.
             Economists are also permanently aware of the fact that there is
             such a thing as the ‘economic way of looking at life’ (as Nobel
             Prize winner Gary Becker wrote) and of both the potential and
             the limits of this perspective. Lawyers usually lack such a clear
             vision of their field. This makes it necessary to re-evaluate
             normative legal science. While economists primarily study the
             behaviour of the Homo economicus (trying to explain human
             conduct from the economic perspective), lawyers try to answer
             a preceding question: what does it mean that a human being
             is a Homo juridicus and what is it, therefore, that he ought to
             do? This is as little related to what humans do in fact as it is in
             economics.
                  See Becker (1992): economists study the behaviour of Homo eco-
                  nomicus, thus presuming that people and organizations behave
                  rationally. Also see Heyne (2002, 4). In law, the premise is
                  that actors ought to behave in the way required by law. Even
                  Jeremy Bentham (1789 [1970]), who clearly distinguishes between
                  descriptive and normative legal science, refrains from elaborating
                  on what normative activity exactly comes down to being. The
                  term ‘Homo juridicus’ was used before, but in a different context,
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                                     The Homo juridicus                        43
               by Supiot (2005). Hage (2011) explores whether a normative legal
               science is even possible.
           24.     Away from the Normative Haze
           Perhaps the lack of focus on what is the core question of
           legal research can be explained by the phenomenon that, in
           traditional legal research, the description of existing law and
           the normative (and sometimes also the empirical) dimension
           are usually not clearly distinguished from each other. Often,
           academic work in law is geared to describing a piece of legisla-
           tion or a judicial decision, followed by a discussion of whether
           the legislature or the court ruled correctly or incorrectly. The
           normative element is often camouflaged by interpreting the
           statute or decision in a certain way. This is a legitimate way of
           working in legal practice: it gives the impression that the law
           is subject to gradual and continuous development. However,
           this does not mean that both activities should not be separated
           analytically: from an academic perspective, a legal judgment
           by way of a ‘reasonable’ interpretation does not suffice. Any
           normative choice should not stay in the haze, but should be
           properly elucidated.
               The type of questions practitioners are usually interested in is
               what is the positive law (as it exists here and today) as apparent
               from – usually – national legislation and case law. It may be that
               this positive law is not completely clear, leading to the question
               of how ‘the law’ should read. This question is then answered on
               the basis of the existing legal system, often by way of interpreta-
               tion of existing (national) sources. See also Fletcher (1981, 987).
               There is nothing wrong with judges and practitioners answering
               a question in this way, but if academics do so, they make use of
               the internal approach towards law that is now under so much
               pressure. Rubin (1988, 1881) rightly observes: ‘the process of
               justification is often better served by leaving the awkward unsaid
               and the incongruent unexplained, by generating a sort of nor-
               mative haze in which implications drift about without coherent
               moorings’.
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             44                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             25.     The Need for an External Normative Perspective
             It may not seem very revolutionary to emphasize that the
             law is about the ‘ought’ and therefore deals with normative
             questions. However, it was noted above (no. 10) that legal aca-
             demics often adopt an internal perspective: they use the same
             language and conceptions as their object of study and often
             have close ties with legal practice. We can now better under-
             stand why this is the case. The question of what the law ought
             to be is a question legal practice also deals with. It is because
             of the prescriptive nature of the legal discipline that academ-
             ics make recommendations to those who decide what the law
             is, including to legislatures, courts and administrations using
             the same terms that the authorities use when formulating their
             commands.
                 This does not mean that this internal perspective is the only
             one that can be adopted in a normative approach to law. On
             the contrary, as soon as a distinction is made between the posi-
             tive law (the whole body of authoritative statements about law
             at a certain place and time) and how the law ought to read, the
             internal perspective must be abandoned. The challenge is to
             develop such an external normative perspective. Legal science
             today is usually directed towards either the positive law or
             towards the non-normative (as in the empirical approach), so
             the blind spot seems to be the question of what ought to be.
                  This approach distances itself from the view that the ‘ought’ is
                  primarily decided by the competent authorities (in particular, the
                  national legislatures and courts) or by what works empirically.
                  The question is not what the legislature or court says, whether
                  punishment achieves its goal, or whether awarding damages
                  keeps a party from wrong behaviour in the future. These are no
                  doubt relevant questions but how they are answered cannot be
                  decisive for how the law should read. Also, see infra, no. 35.
             There is every reason to develop this external normative per-
             spective further. One of the reasons for this, as mentioned
             before (supra, no. 2), is that the critical approach to traditional
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                                      The Homo juridicus                          45
           legal scholarship threatens to create a situation where argu-
           ably only empirical or theoretical work can meet the highest
           standards of quality. This calls for a reorientation of the
           normative approach so as to satisfy the requirements of an
           academic discipline better.
               This is because the criticism of the traditional (normative) way of
               doing legal research is partly justified: in so far as it is only ori-
               ented towards the products of the national legislature and courts,
               it does not meet the requirement for generalization (cf. supra,
               no. 22). This does not mean, however, that the entire normative
               approach should be banned for this reason – as Richard Posner
               (1990, 69) suggests: ‘What is missing from law are penetrating
               and rigorous theories, counterintuitive hypotheses that are fal-
               sifiable but not falsified (. . .), precise instrumentation, an exact
               vocabulary, a clear separation of positive and normative inquiry,
               quantification of data, credible controlled experiments, rigorous
               statistical inference, useful technological byproducts, dramatic
               interventions with measurable consequences, and above all and
               subsuming most of the previous points, objectively testable – and
               continually retested – hypotheses’.
           Another reason why an external normative perspective is
           required lies in the increasing Europeanization of law. Today’s
           legal norms are no longer produced by national legislatures
           and courts only, but also flow from other sources. This should
           lead to a rethinking of the traditional relationship between
           the law and the state: the idea that law is primarily produced
           by democratically legitimized national institutions must be
           traded in for a view that better reflects today’s reality. This
           means that legal science must look for an approach that deter-
           mines what the law ought to be without making itself depend-
           ent on the authority of the official institutions, or of what
           empirically ‘works’.
               In the last 200 years, the standard view of law has been that law
               is ‘made’ by the democratic national institutions. European law is
               often only seen as a phenomenon that stands next to national law
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             46                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  and most efforts are directed towards underpinning non-national
                  law with conceptions of legitimacy that are derived from the state.
                  In my opinion, this view no longer does justice to the complex
                  reality of the law in a globalizing world. In the last few decades
                  alone, European and international law-givers have not only pro-
                  duced a large numbers of norms, but private regulation also has
                  become ubiquitous. All these different rules strongly influence the
                  behaviour of individuals and organizations without being based
                  in a national state.
                     There are countless examples of this ‘global norm-production’
                  (Teubner 1997, 157). Apart from organizations such as the IMF
                  and the World Bank, the activities of the WTO in particular
                  can have an important impact on the conduct of private parties,
                  more specifically on the issues of free trade, taxes, intellectual
                  property and protection of health. On the other hand, various
                  types of voluntary law, such as norms adopted by corporate
                  networks (the most important example being codes of conduct
                  for corporate social or environmental responsibility), technical
                  standards of standardization organizations (such as the ‘codex
                  alimentarius’) and other types of self-regulation also influence the
                  conduct of private parties. Of more recent origin are model rules
                  such as the Principles of European Contract Law (PECL) and the
                  Draft Common Frame of Reference for European Private Law
                  (DCFR), on which infra, no. 41. They are primarily supposed to
                  be a source of inspiration for (national and European) legislatures
                  and courts.
                     Many of these norms, derived from ‘sites of governance beyond
                  the nation-state’ (De Burca 2008, 104), would not be recognized
                  as binding to a traditional conception of the law because they do
                  not meet the formal criterion of being enacted by the relevant
                  authorities and backed by coercive power. But they often do set
                  the norms for specific groups of people and are therefore impor-
                  tant in predicting their behaviour: in this sense, they are often
                  more important as a source of private law than rules that are
                  formally binding.
                     The conclusion to be drawn from this section is that, as the
                  legitimacy of law was in the seventeenth and eighteenth century
                  found in the laws of nature, and in the nineteenth and twentieth
                  century it was founded on a democratic process of decision-
                  making within national states, it is now time to find a new source
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                                      The Homo juridicus                         47
               of legitimacy for the twenty-first century (cf. supra, no. 17). See
               also Smits (2009a) and, for excellent overviews of the relationship
               between private law and the state, Michaels & Jansen (2006) and
               Jansen & Michaels (2007). As indicated, this book will primarily
               focus on one consequence of this development – how this new
               source of legitimacy will affect legal research. However, Section 4
               of this chapter (nos. 27–28) attempts to find a theoretical under-
               pinning of law that is not dependent for its validity on the official
               institutions.
           26.     Other Normative Disciplines
           It should be pointed out that the legal discipline does not
           have the exclusive right of asking normative questions. Ethics
           (the discipline of formulating guidelines for the ‘good life’) is
           another field in which questions about the ‘ought’ are asked.
           Ethics, however, is not concerned with legal norms, but with
           norms of a moral nature (in which the sanction is not imposed
           by the state but by one’s own conscience). These moral norms
           are usually formulated as commands of a general nature:
           ‘Do not lie’, ‘Do good’, ‘Keep your promise’, but – as is also
           the case in law – what these principles are worth can only
           be decided in an actual situation. Ethics also distinguishes
           between normative ethics (‘What is the morally right thing
           to do?’) and meta-ethics (in which this normative debate is
           analysed and the question can be asked, ‘What are the origins
           of ethics?’). The least binding norms are social conventions:
           one does not text in the company of others, only runners are
           allowed to spit in public, and so on.
               Cf. Tamanaha (2006, 63): as is also the case in law, it often only
               becomes clear how to apply moral norms in an actual situa-
               tion.  See also, infra, no. 33. Comparisons of law and ethics are
               just as rare as studies that investigate a problem from both a
               legal and an ethical perspective. The lawyer interested in a playful
               introduction to how ethics deals with dilemmas is referred to the
               Isabel Dalhousie series of the Scots author and jurist Alexander
               McCall Smith. Although some may doubt whether norms that are
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             48                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  not enforced by the state are followed, these norms can be legally
                  relevant as ‘social norms’. See Posner (2000).
                     Law and ethics are not the only normative disciplines.
                  Economics is also regarded as such, in so far as it aims to say some-
                  thing about how welfare in society is best distributed and about
                  what to do in specific situations. In the last decades, however, this
                  approach (particularly by Rosenberg (1992)) has had to give way
                  to a more empirical perspective from which economic phenomena
                  are only explained (usually by way of mathematical models). See
                  Backhouse (1997, 108) and infra, no. 57. The normative version of
                  economics has this in common with legal science: there is no one
                  right answer but one can always debate what ought to be. This
                  leads Dow (2002, 3) to ask: ‘Is disagreement the sign of an imma-
                  ture science; given time will we all converge on the same answers?
                  Or is there something particular about economics which makes
                  this impossible?’ As will become clear in Chapter III, the latter is
                  the only right answer for the legal discipline.
             4. LAW AS SPONTANEOUS ORDER
             27.     Theoretical Background
             An approach focusing on what the law ought to be without
             making itself dependent either on the authoritative institu-
             tions (in particular national legislatures and courts), or on
             what works empirically requires more explanation than has
             been offered up to this point. This explanation, which pays
             attention to the method of establishing what the law ought to
             be is offered in Chapter III. In the remainder of this section, I
             will consider the theoretical framework in which the develop-
             ment of private law is seen as an evolutionary process that has
             led to a largely spontaneous order (as opposed to a legal order
             created by the official authorities).
                  The idea that law can be seen as the product of an evolution-
                  ary process is not new in itself: Von Savigny (1831) and Maine
                  (1861) are the best-known proponents of this idea. Remarkably
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                                      The Homo juridicus                        49
               enough, however, this view has disappeared in the last century
               and has been generally replaced by legal theories that see law as
               a creation of competent authorities (in brief – legal positivism)
               or as part of some transcendental nature or culture (in brief –
               natural law). Particularly in the field of private law, the validity
               of a rule is often made dependent on the choice of a legislature
               or court. To look at law as a set of rules that has spontaneously
               grown under the influence of both external and internal factors
               largely disappeared as a valid perspective. This is a pity because
               evolutionary insights sometimes match the law surprisingly well.
               Furthermore, applying these insights can lead to a restoration
               of the ties between law and other academic disciplines. See, with
               many details, Smits (2002b) and Zumbansen & Calliess (2011).
               Daniel Dennett (1995, 21) was right to identify Darwin’s evolu-
               tionary theory as ‘the single best idea anyone has ever had’ and
               Wilson (1998) even claims that evolutionary theory offers the
               only explanation for structural change, regardless of the discipline
               involved (Wilson 1998).
                  It should be emphasized that an evolutionary explanation is
               not the only possible way to fill the gap between focusing on the
               positive law and a non-normative approach. Alternative views are
               possible, provided they leave space for other sources of law than
               those that fit in with a positivist approach. To think in terms of
               Kelsen’s ‘Grundnorm’ or Hart’s ‘Rule of Recognition’ does not
               meet this requirement: the rise of European norms and of private
               regulation makes it increasingly difficult to use these criteria to
               decide upon what is law and what is not. See also Hesselink (2009,
               42) and Calliess & Zumbansen (2010).
           Despite the many variations in evolutionary thinking, the core
           of the theory of evolution as developed by Charles Darwin
           in On the Origin of Species (1859) is clear enough. It is that
           change in organisms takes place through natural selection.
           The individual members of a species organize their lives so as
           to produce the most adaptive offspring and in doing so, they
           necessarily adapt themselves to changing circumstances. The
           species best able to adapt itself will eventually survive and
           species failing to adapt will become extinct.
              The idea that development is the result of a process of
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             50                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             natural (spontaneous) selection has been applied to many
             other disciplines outside biology, including the history of
             science (Popper), political theory (Hayek), ethics (socio-
             biology), economics and psychology. These last two fields
             have developed real sub-disciplines of evolutionary economics
             and psychology with their own extensive literature and profes-
             sorial chairs. In all of these fields, the thought of an unalter-
             able human nature or a conscious design is abandoned in
             favour of the idea of natural selection. Thus, the spontaneous
             development of social and political systems of morality and
             economics is studied.
                  In classic Darwinism, this ‘struggle for life’ can only occur if
                  certain requirements are met. First, there must be variation in
                  species (otherwise some species could not survive better than
                  others). Secondly, the variation must concern variation in fitness
                  (understood as the ability to survive and reproduce, some species
                  being more able to adapt themselves to changing circumstances
                  than others). Thirdly, the characteristics constituting the fitness
                  of the species must be inherited, meaning that they must be able
                  to be transferred from one generation to the next.
             The law can also be seen as the product of a process of natural
             selection.
                  This means that the three Darwinian requirements for natural
                  selection need to be applied to the law. The variation in species
                  then consists of the existence of diverse national (and sometimes
                  European) legal rules to solve identical problems. These rules
                  mainly evolved in national (socio-economic and cultural) envi-
                  ronments. They relate to essential differences between jurisdic-
                  tions that reflect differing views of society (such as in levels of
                  solidarity, of duties to help others, levels of social security, and
                  so on).
                     Secondly, these rules are also likely to vary in fitness. Many
                  of the present day rules in the various European countries are
                  the result of a long evolution during which they were adapted to
                  the environment they had to operate in. According to evolution-
                  ary theory, other rules that once existed in these countries must
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                                      The Homo juridicus                         51
               have been eliminated in this process of natural selection and any
               change in the environment in the future would – again – lead to
               the adaptation of present rules. Some rules may become extinct
               while others become more dominant. Legal history has telling
               examples of this process. Thus, the rule on laesio enormis and the
               numerus clausus of contracts in Roman law had to go because
               they were no longer fit for the economic environment after the
               Middle Ages. Rules on animal trials were abolished because of
               new societal insights and the rule that only men could vote for
               Parliament had to be replaced because of a changing societal and
               political environment.
                  The third requirement for natural selection – that the charac-
               teristics constituent of the fitness of the species must be inherited
               – is more problematic in the context of law. This is due to the
               simple fact that descendants taking over the genes of their pred-
               ecessors do not exist. Rules do not procreate in the literal sense of
               the word. But one can think of an analogy with genes. In evolu-
               tionary economics, it was suggested that accepted routines played
               the same role in firms as genes in organisms: routines provide the
               firm with a stable identity that endures over time and – just like
               genes – programme its behaviour. The same analogy can be used
               in law. Rules are not just rules: they are learnt by students and
               applied in practice. Normally, agents (in our case, the legal actors)
               will not deviate from these rules because of their deference to legal
               certainty and equality. In this sense, the practice of application is
               being transferred from one generation to another. And just like
               genes in biological organisms, these rules may gradually change
               under the influence of a changing environment (society).
                  The possibility of applying these general requirements for
               evolution to the law allows us to see legal change as a process
               dependent on both nature (the inherent characteristics) and
               nurture (the environment) in the law. See on all this Smits (2002b).
           28.     Some Consequences
           Several insights follow from this view of law as a spontaneously
           growing order, in which the various surviving jurisdictions are
           to be seen as the product of natural selection.
              In the first place, law is no longer seen as the product of
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             52                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             conscious design, but as the result of a long process of trial and
             error. This makes the law less suited for conscious decision-
             making than some would assume. Many rules have acquired a
             place in the legal system because they have survived the test of
             time. As David Friedman puts it: ‘A system of legal rules is not
             entirely, perhaps not chiefly, the product of deliberate human
             design; to a considerable extent it represents the unplanned
             outcome of a large number of separate decisions, by legislators
             (. . .) or judges (. . .). It is therefore possible that such a system
             may have no objective for us to find.’
                  Friedman (2000, 4). This is of immediate relevance to the debate
                  about European private law: cf. Von Bar & Clive (2009a). The
                  Study Group on Social Justice in European Private Law (2004)
                  made an ardent plea for a debate about the desired level of social
                  justice in the European Union before provisions to be included
                  in a European instrument of private law were drafted. The group
                  claimed that because of the one-sided focus that the European
                  Union has on the promotion of the internal market, a ‘European’
                  view of justice in contract law would be lacking, unlike the case
                  in national law. This is why a ‘social justice agenda’ should be
                  developed: ‘At the heart of the social justice agenda beats the
                  concern about the distributive effects of the market order. The
                  rules of contract law shape the distribution of wealth and power
                  in modern societies. (. . .) A modern statement of the principles
                  of the private law of contract needs to recognise its increasingly
                  pivotal role in establishing distributive fairness in society’ (Study
                  Group 2004, 665). This view connects to Kronman (1980).
                     In my opinion, this overly emphasizes a vision of Europe as a
                  makeable society. The best rules for Europe in my view are not
                  determined by some omnipotent legislature that can change the
                  existing distribution of power and wealth – if this is what one
                  wants to do. Of course the legislature sometimes has to intervene
                  to look after the interests of the weak but this does not mean that
                  this should disrupt the entire relationship between freedom of
                  contract and protection. To me, the law is not primarily the result
                  of conscious choice but rather of spontaneous development. I
                  referred to Hayek (1973–1979 and 1988) in previous work. See,
                  for criticism, Hesselink (2010).
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                                       The Homo juridicus                          53
                  As will be shown below (no. 35), this means that it would be
               contrary to the nature of private law to consider it as completely
               subordinate to some political goal: such a view would mean that
               if the goal were not achieved, private law would have failed. In
               my view, it is not the state that can decide ex ante which pur-
               poses private law should serve; at best, the state can correct the
               result ex post (Weinrib 1995, 212). Moreover, a redistribution
               of wealth through contract law would not work: its most likely
               effect would be that a party would no longer enter into a contract
               with a ‘weaker’ party because it would then run the risk that the
               contract would not be valid. Fried (1981, 106) framed this point
               in the following manner: ‘Redistribution is not a burden to be
               borne in a random, ad hoc way by those who happen to cross
               paths with persons poorer than themselves. Such a conception,
               heart-warmingly spontaneous though it may be, would in the end
               undermine our ability to plan and to live our lives as we choose.’
           A second consequence of viewing private law from an evolu-
           tionary perspective is that it is less subordinate to a process of
           political and democratic decision-making than is sometimes
           asserted.
               The work on the Draft Common Frame of Reference (DCFR)
               for European Private Law (Von Bar & Clive 2009a) has brought
               this matter to the foreground. For many authors, the creation of
               a European private law is primarily a political process: the right
               balance between the market and social justice (or autonomy
               and protection) should be established in a democratic way and
               should not be left to academics only. To consult practitioners and
               stakeholders in drafting the DCFR is not enough: the European
               Parliament and national legislatures should also be involved in
               order to prevent the DCFR from being Professorenrecht. Van
               Zelst (2008, 244–245) formulates this as follows: ‘First of all,
               the scholars that are involved in the drafting of the DCFR lack
               democratic legitimacy. The group represents neither all of the
               populations of the member states, nor their political convictions.
               Secondly, it is questionable whether professors should be vested
               with the translation of social-political reality into legislation. In a
               democratic society, this would seem to principally be the task of
               the (democratically legitimised) legislature (. . .).’
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             54                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                    This view, clearly inspired by the claim of the Critical Legal
                  Studies movement that all law is politics (Kennedy 1976), cannot
                  be accepted. In my view, private law is not just another policy
                  area with which instrumental goals are achieved. It only has to be
                  submitted to democratic decision-making if it is seen as an instru-
                  ment to achieve a political goal (cf. Tamanaha 2006). This is in
                  conformity with our understanding of private law: it is usually
                  seen as independent of the state and as having its own ‘rationality’
                  (Weinrib 1995). Private law developed gradually throughout the
                  ages and reflects the norms desired by the community where these
                  rules evolved. This does not mean that private law is ‘neutral’ or
                  would not be full of choices made by citizens, legislatures and
                  courts, but it does mean that democratic decision-making is less
                  important than in many other fields. See, with many details, Smits
                  (2009a) and Jansen (2010) for an historical account of how so-
                  called ‘non-legislative codifications’ (including the Corpus Iuris
                  Civilis) have often derived their legitimacy from the fact that they
                  were simply applied in practice.
             The view that private law can be seen as a spontaneous (self-
             developing) order has still a third consequence: it also means
             that this order provides us with knowledge about what our
             view of the law ought to be. In the prevailing (positivist) view
             of the law, legal rules can be changed at any moment depend-
             ing on what the competent legislature decides to do. However,
             this view is less suited to a private law that primarily aims to
             facilitate parties for whom the mere fact that some rule exists is
             more important than the actual contents of this rule.
                  In a Darwinian view of law, society is not regulated by norms
                  that are imposed from the outside but, instead, all law is the
                  provisional end result of an everlasting development. It is there-
                  fore an historically grown (and still growing) organism. Holmes
                  (1881 [2004]) also saw law as an historically developed collective
                  experience. Cf. MacIntyre (1981, 121ff.) and Jansen (2005, 759).
             The final consequence of considering law as an evolutionary
             system is that it facilitates the explanation of how law is depend-
             ent on its internal structure, shaped by past transformations
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                                      The Homo juridicus                         55
           that are now irreversible. This nature of the organism is now
           often considered to be a constraint on change. The path law
           has taken in the past thus affects its future development. The
           problem with laws based on this ‘path dependent’ view is
           that the result from this evolutionary process often does not
           produce the best possible solution. In economics, the result
           may not be the most efficient organizations and in law it may
           not be the ‘best’ rules. Thus, alternative categorizations of the
           sources of obligations are certainly possible, but the persist-
           ent use of the distinctions made by Gaius and his successors
           throughout the ages have set the agenda.
               The question whether an old rule will make way for a new one is
               dependent on the extent to which the legal actors are prepared to
               deviate from existing practices – that is governed by maximizing
               principles such as legal certainty, equality and efficiency. If the
               costs of this change are too high compared to what the changed
               environment requires, it is not likely that any change will occur.
               Put differently, the external pressure for a change of law needs
               to be so high that it exceeds the costs of change. However, under
               such circumstances, the best solution will not always evolve.
               Francis Bacon once wrote in The New Organon (1620 [1960, 89]):
               ‘In matters of state a change even for the better is distrusted,
               because it unsettles what is established; these things resting on
               authority, consent, fame and opinion, not on demonstration.’
                  See, on Gaius and the use of his summa divisio throughout
               history, Watson (1994). The distinction between obligations
               arising from contract, delict, or in another manner (and subse-
               quent categorizations based on this) still determines our mode
               of thinking. Attempts to trade this in for a system that does
               more justice to reality (such as P.S. Atiyah’s proposal to rewrite
               the law of obligations in terms of benefit and reliance) have had
               little success. It is inherent in law that it will only slowly move
               away from well established conceptions, or as Gordon (2007,
               366) states: ‘Following existing practices may be more likely to
               gain the necessary approval.’ Gordon (2007, 372) refers to Stair’s
               Institutions of the Law of Scotland (I.1.15): ‘The nations are more
               happy, whose laws have entered by long custom, wrung out
               from their debates upon particular cases (. . .). But in statutes the
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             56                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  lawgiver must at once balance the conveniences and inconven-
                  iences, wherein he may and often doth fall short.’ Vranken (2006,
                  16) is critical of this tethering to the past, stating that in essence
                  it is forcing legal actors only to jump ‘with feet of clay’. This is,
                  of course, no hindrance to legal academics in being as creative as
                  possible (cf. infra, no. 50).
             The extent to which these consequences will in fact occur
             depends on the field in question. They will be more apparent in
             private law than in administrative law or tax law. New fields of
             law often emerge to realize certain policy goals, meaning that a
             sufficiently developed normative framework does not exist. It
             makes more sense then to test the rule on the extent to which
             it achieves this goal than on how it fits in with the system. In
             other words, if the legal system is more advanced (has its own
             ‘rationality’), it can fulfil the role of an objective and autono-
             mous whole more adequately. This is presumably also why the
             discipline of private law is often seen as the field best suited to
             learn ‘how to think like a lawyer.’
                  As will become apparent in Chapter III, law often needs to rec-
                  oncile contradictory ‘goals’. While this goal is clear in medicine
                  (to ensure the health of people), the aim to be achieved in law is
                  much less clear and this means that the arguments are inevitably
                  normative: one can always dispute what one should do or refrain
                  from doing in law. The normative authority that remains is then
                  how a legal rule or decision fits into ‘the system’: the conflicting
                  interests (for example, deterrence and protection) have already
                  been weighed. Cf. Weinrib (1995) and Friedman (2000, 4).
                     The more law is treated as an instrument to achieve a certain
                  goal, the less useful it is to regard it as the product of a spontane-
                  ous order. It is well known that Von Jhering was one of the first to
                  see the law’s aim – contrary to the Historical School – as achiev-
                  ing a goal (Law as a Means to an End, (1877)). Since that time, law
                  has no longer been seen as an autonomous and coherent system
                  that can reflect immutable principles. The non-instrumental view
                  of law in the eighteenth and nineteenth century changed into a
                  more instrumental view in the twentieth century. The present
                  emphasis on an economic and empirical analysis of law – and the
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                                     The Homo juridicus                      57
               threat that a normative approach is no longer seen as useful – is
               the culmination of this. See, with many details, Tamanaha (2006).
           29.     What is Next? What is Legally Required?
           In this chapter, the question of how the law ought to read
           has been elevated to the core question of legal scholarship.
           The next step is to ask how this is to be ascertained. In other
           words, which method should be used to determine what one is
           legally obliged to do if one cannot have recourse to the author-
           ity of democratically legitimated institutions? This question is
           addressed in the next chapter.
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             III.          Methodology of normative
                           legal science
             1.     LAW AS THE DISCIPLINE OF CONFLICTING
                    ARGUMENTS
             30.     Introduction
             How does one determine what one is legally obliged to do? It is
             clear that, in the view of legal scholarship that has been defended
             above, this question cannot be answered by simply relying on
             the authority of legislatures and the courts. What then, are the
             factors relevant to answering this question? This chapter argues
             that the core of the normative approach is that there is not one
             answer to what legally ought to be. If the law provides rules for
             a society and the views on how to regulate this society differ –
             which is necessarily the case – there must also be different views
             of what ought to be. The academic-legal method must therefore
             reflect this important insight. It means that legal science is not
             about physical reality but about the world of ideas. It is a disci-
             pline in which arguments for and against various possible solu-
             tions to legal problems are identified and thought through. This
             makes the legal discipline pre-eminently argumentative.
                  See, apart from Collier (1991) (mentioned supra, no. 23) and
                  Singer (2009), what Rubin (1988, 1893) says about the activity of
                  legal academics: ‘The conflict of norms is the essence of norma-
                  tively-based scholarship (. . .). The entire point of standard legal
                  scholarship is to explore and contrast the pragmatic implications
                  of conflicting normative positions.’
             This approach to law has the distinct advantage that the legal
             discipline is more closely connected to other academic fields
                                                 58
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science        59
           in which so-called self-evident knowledge must always be
           disputed anew. Even if there is consensus about the appropri-
           ateness of a legal rule, it must be continuously debated by ana-
           lysing the arguments for and against it. Law as an academic
           discipline would have perished long ago if a general consensus
           on how the law should read ended the debate.
               It seems appropriate to cite the English essayist, Matthew Arnold
               (see Collier 1991, 152): ‘That is what I call living by ideas: when
               one side of a question has long had your earnest support, when all
               your feelings are engaged, when you hear all round you no lan-
               guage but one, when your party talks this language like a steam-
               engine and can imagine no other, – still to be able to think, still to
               be irresistibly carried, if so it be, by the current of thought to the
               opposite side of the question (. . .).’
           The mere fact that one can dispute the desirability of constitu-
           tional review or positive discrimination, or even the admissibility
           of the death penalty, does not make the law less of an academic
           discipline. This is because the task of legal science does not
           consist of finding ‘the’ right rule or outcome to a case, but instead
           consists of identifying the relevant arguments for and against
           such rules and outcomes. As the main activity of the practicing
           lawyer may be to exclude all uncertainty, the mission of the legal
           academic is to question all seemingly certain outcomes.
               Long ago, Hugo Grotius emphasized in De Jure Belli ac Pacis (II,
               23, 1) that doubt about how the law ought to read is at the core of
               the legal discipline: ‘between what we ought and what we ought
               not to do, there is a medium but it approaches sometimes nearer
               to one and sometimes to the other extreme’. And in his In Praise
               of Folly of 1511, Erasmus famously qualified law as the most
               learned of all disciplines because with each different topic it will
               ‘heap glosses upon glosses, and opinions on the neck of opinions’.
           31.     Structure of this Chapter
           This chapter elaborates on the idea of legal science being the
           discipline of conflicting arguments. The remainder of this
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             60                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             section (nos. 32–37) will address why, in law, discussion about
             the desired outcome is always possible and why non-legal
             methods, in particular, that attempt to dismiss uncertainty
             are doomed. Consensus about the normative is often difficult
             to reach and therefore should not be endlessly pursued. The
             second section of this chapter (nos. 38–46) will be devoted
             to the various views on the role of legal science, and the
             promotion of one view that should preferably be adopted.
             32.     Searching for the Stone of Wisdom
             Legal science’s persistent inclination is to exclude uncertainty
             over what is the right rule or what is the right outcome of a
             case. Given this inclination, legal academics often follow the
             rhetorical strategy of the practising lawyer who has every
             interest in making it appear as if his decision is the only right
             one, and thus to bar all normative debate about whether this
             is really the case. This causes legal science often to be directed
             to finding only one possible answer to the question about what
             is the right course of action. However, it is justifiable to ques-
             tion this perception that there is only one possible view about
             what ought to be. This will be investigated on the basis of the
             methods that lawyers tend to use to base their decisions on:
             the doctrinal (no. 33); the economic (no. 34); and the empirical
             (no. 35). Attention is also paid to fundamental rights as these
             are frequently seen as anchors providing certainty about the
             right outcome (no. 36).
                  For what follows I was inspired by, and derive arguments from,
                  the work of Joseph William Singer (2009) and Edward L. Rubin
                  (1988). The law is usually expected to be able to decide disputes
                  in an objective and rational way. And yet – as Singer (2009, 903)
                  clearly points out – the question of ‘why’ a certain rule has been
                  accepted or an outcome has been reached is often not answered in
                  a satisfactory manner. Why is it that one is allowed to use prop-
                  erty in the way one wishes and why is it that parties are bound to
                  their contract? Lawyers not satisfied with a mere reference to the
                  authority of legislature or court, and who are aware that their
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science        61
               personal opinion is not enough, tend to find refuge in approaches
               such as the economic analysis of law. However, lawyers should be
               able to reason why these two (and other) principles are valid on
               legal grounds: this is where the gap observed above arises between
               positive law and a non-legal approach (see supra, no. 25).
           33.     What Ought to Be? The Doctrinal Approach
           Is it possible to say what, legally, ought to be only by consult-
           ing legal doctrines? Students usually learn the law by studying
           doctrine as laid down in textbooks, whilst practitioners use
           these same textbooks to establish how legislatures, courts and
           academic authors judge the questions that they have to deal
           with on a daily basis. However, it needs little explanation to
           show that the doctrinal system itself will never lead to one given
           outcome in a dispute of substance. A jurist’s real activity con-
           sists of making a choice from among the often contradictory
           views of what legally ought to be. The doctrinal system fulfils an
           important role in this regard because it offers insight into exist-
           ing rules and previously decided cases. The doctrinal system,
           however, will never provide certainty about how to decide.
               This meaning of legal doctrine is well captured by the Dutch law
               professor, Herman Schoordijk (1972, 15), who claims that the
               system forces the legal actor to ‘bring his value judgments, that
               can never be based completely on the existing legal system, into
               harmony with judgments previously given in practice or theory.’
               It is a well-known fact that a decision in a new case can never
               follow from a rule or a previously decided case because the latter
               can never determine its own field of application (the cases to which
               it will be applied in the future). This makes it often unclear which
               rule is to be applied, or whether there is a previously formulated
               rule at all. And even if there is no doubt about which rule should
               be applicable, it will almost always leave space for more than one
               interpretation. See also Singer (2009, 908), who shows that even
               if normative consensus can be reached about a certain principle,
               this will be at such an abstract level that it does not create clarity
               on how to decide a dispute. If the rule on the other hand does offer
               sufficient guidance, its contents will necessarily be disputed.
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             62                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                    Hence, the core of legal activity does not lie in the drafting or
                  application of norms, but in giving a judgment in a normative
                  dispute and therefore in a way of reasoning. It can be questioned
                  whether this comes sufficiently to the fore in legal education as
                  most teaching materials often fail to offer alternative ways of
                  reasoning. Rather, the law is usually presented as having only one
                  possible solution. This rather narrow-minded approach could
                  be altered if textbooks, as a start, abandoned their approach of
                  using only one national jurisdiction and adopt a broader focus.
                  For example, rather than limiting their scope to German, or some
                  other, national contract law, students could start with European
                  contract law instead. See also infra, nos. 40 and 62.
             This confirms that the doctrinal method does not offer any
             normative certainty since it cannot answer the pertinent ques-
             tion of how the law ought to read (so looking at which rule to
             apply or how to decide a case of substance) as the arguments
             behind the rule or the case are, in the end, decisive.
                  The temptation of law has long been to build a coherent and
                  self-referential system that can exist, independent of reality, by
                  making use of the mos geometricus. However, this will not lead to
                  certainty in applying the law (a re-definition of the value of a legal
                  system is given, infra, no. 45.
             34.     What Ought to Be? The Role of Law and Economics
             Now that the doctrinal approach has been shown not to
             offer sufficient certainty, the question still remains where one
             might find more certainty in answering the lingering question
             of what people and organizations legally ought to do. The
             present approach, which seems to have gained some popular-
             ity, is to consult other disciplines outside the legal arena. This
             explains the rise of an economic analysis of the law, which
             aims to offer a more rational perspective. Economic analysis
             takes a utilitarian view and argues for the implementation of
             legal rules that generate the most social welfare or benefits. In
             the clear words of Kaplow and Shavell: ‘Legal rules should be
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science     63
           selected entirely with respect to their effect on the well being
           of individuals in society. This position implies that notions of
           fairness like corrective justice should receive no independent
           weight in the assessment of legal rules.’
               See Kaplow & Shavell (2002, 3) and, for the many applications
               of economic analysis to different fields of law, Posner (2011). The
               descriptive variant of the field of Law and Economics was briefly
               mentioned supra (no. 13). In the view of Kaplow & Shavell, the
               social welfare of society as a whole consists of the aggregate of
               all individual preferences of citizens. The many variations in the
               definition of social welfare are not discussed here.
           At first glance, the application of this utilitarian criterion
           seems to offer the guidance needed to ban all uncertainty
           about what societal actors are legally obliged to do. Each
           rule is then judged on its impact on the welfare of individu-
           als, taking into consideration the incentives provided for the
           particular action and its costs and benefits. This has the dis-
           tinct advantage that all the benefits and disadvantages of the
           rule are brought back to one common denominator, which is
           social welfare. This means that one value (such as justice) no
           longer needs to be balanced against another value (such as
           efficiency). More importantly, with such an objective measure,
           one can forgo the difficulty of making a normative decision.
           Put differently, the question of what people ought to do is then
           answered by way of one general and non-legal criterion: ‘What
           is it that we as individuals value most?’
               Although it seems promising, does economic analysis really
           live up to its promises and, if so, can it replace the normative
           approach? There are three reasons why this question must be
           answered in the negative. In the first place, there is the practi-
           cal difficulty that tying the preferences of people to a single
           (quantitative) denominator is not only difficult, but it will still
           require a normative choice since individual preferences about
           what monetary value to attach to a particular interest differ
           greatly.
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             64                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  See Singer (2009, 920) for this ‘morally constrained utilitarian-
                  ism’: we cannot escape normative argument. Next to this practi-
                  cal difficulty, there is the more fundamental objection that many
                  values (such as the principle of equality or freedom of contract)
                  are simply unfit to be quantified or, at least, it is very difficult to
                  do so. Ultimately, figures alone cannot replace arguments.
                     The debate about the meaning of economic analysis for the law
                  is not as recent as it may seem. Economics as an ancillary tool for
                  (in particular) private law emerged around 1850 in Germany under
                  the influence of authors such as H. Dankwardt. The approach
                  even became fashionable in the 1880s thanks to the work of Victor
                  Mataja (1888) and Friedrich Kleinwächter (1883). Their general
                  stance was that the economic approach may be useful in so far
                  as one is dealing with the question of how the law should read
                  rather than what the law is, but that one should be careful about
                  replacing traditional legal analysis with economic analysis.
             Secondly, economic analysis of the law is only interested in
             people’s preferences and not in why these preferences exist in
             the first place. Therefore, it does not sufficiently distinguish
             between relevant and irrelevant reasons for a certain outcome.
             In law, it is not only (or even primarily) the result that counts,
             but it is the reason why this result was chosen that matters. To
             quote an example from Singer, slavery is not wrong because the
             preferences of those who oppose it outweigh the preferences of
             those who favour it. If this argument were accepted, the dignity
             of a few could be subordinated to the power of the majority.
                  Singer (2009, 918). In the legal field, arguing in terms of costs and
                  benefits alone will be ineffective. Otherwise, a party could claim
                  victory simply because its interest or welfare outweighed the inter-
                  ests of the other party or the community’s welfare. This cannot be
                  the basis of a convincing legal analysis.
                     The theory of ‘efficient breach’ clearly shows the limited value of
                  economic analysis for the normative question about the ‘ought’.
                  According to the doctrine of efficient breach, a contracting party
                  may refuse to perform a contract and pay damages instead if
                  this is economically more efficient. A party can thus decide not
                  to perform, if it will be better off without the other party being
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science        65
               worse off as a result (because the latter will receive the expectation
               interest). The premise is that the performances of both parties
               can be expressed in monetary terms. However, Singer (2009, 945)
               convincingly shows that this is often not the case. If the party
               in breach of contract is, for example, a tenant who, before the
               end of the lease of an apartment for one year, wanted to move
               somewhere else because he had found a job in another town, it
               would be efficient if the landlord allowed the tenant to sublet the
               apartment to a third party – even if this were not allowed in the
               contract. This seems to lead to an increase in the total amount of
               welfare: the landlord will still receive the rent, the tenant can take
               the job without extra costs, and his new employer is also happy
               because his prospective employee can start on time. However, it is
               entirely feasible that the landlord may have a non-economic inter-
               est in not allowing the subtenant to move. It may be that he has
               an interest in being paid by this specific tenant. It may also be that
               he does not want the hassle of looking for a new tenant within
               the agreed period. Perhaps these interests of the landlord are not
               relevant but the point is that one needs a legal approach to decide
               upon this. Singer’s example shows that the true (normative) ques-
               tion is whether these are legally justified interests of the landlord.
               This is a question that economic analysis is unable to answer.
           The final reason why an economic analysis of the law cannot
           replace a normative approach is that it assumes from the very
           beginning a premise that is not universally accepted. It pre-
           sumes not only that more social welfare is a good thing, but
           also that each individual is free to determine his or her own
           preferences. This is a liberal view that will not be shared by
           everyone: many will say that part of this individual autonomy
           must a priori be given up in order to achieve some degree of
           social justice for everyone in society.
               See Singer (2009, 916). In addition, it should be mentioned that
               economics also derives its foundations from elsewhere and is at
               times even dependent on the law itself. Economics presupposes
               an institutional framework within which, for example, property
               rights exist that can be freely transferred by way of a contract:
               the legal status quo is as much the starting point in describing and
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             66                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  explaining reality as it is in judging why it should change (in the
                  variant of the field of normative Law and Economics).
             These limitations do not mean that economic analysis is not
             useful. As a matter of fact, legal rules are often deliberately
             designed to achieve pre-set economic goals. Even if this is not
             the case, it is useful to know about the costs and benefits of
             implementing a certain rule or reaching a certain judicial deci-
             sion. However, it is important to distinguish the usefulness of
             economic analysis in those specific circumstances from its use-
             fulness in answering the question about the ‘ought’. Although
             economic analysis of the law can be a useful tool in answering
             some legal questions, in the end it is an inadequate tool in
             answering the question of what laws we ought to follow.
                  An example of how economic knowledge can feed legal judgments
                  concerns the scope of art. 114 of the Treaty on the Functioning
                  of the European Union (TFEU). This provision provides that
                  the European legislator can adopt measures for the approxima-
                  tion of national provisions tasked with the establishment and
                  functioning of the internal market. However, this is not a general
                  competence to regulate anything related to the internal market of
                  the EU. The European Court of Justice made it clear that a direc-
                  tive or a regulation based on art. 114 must genuinely have as its
                  objective the improvement of the conditions for the establishment
                  and functioning of the internal market. A mere finding of dispari-
                  ties between national rules and of the abstract risk of obstacles to
                  this market is not sufficient to justify a harmonizing measure (CoJ
                  EU 5 October 2000, C-376/98 (concerning tobacco advertising)).
                  This implies that economic research is needed in order to create a
                  legal basis for a new European measure aiming to better facilitate
                  the internal market. See Low (2010) for an extensive discussion of
                  what this may lead to.
             35.     What Ought to Be? The Empirical Approach
             The use of empirical research is yet another approach often
             offered as a helpful tool in determining how the law should
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science      67
           read. Particularly in the United States, this has led to an influ-
           ential view of the law that is usually referred to as ‘Pragmatism’.
           According to Richard Posner, this is an approach that is ‘more
           empirical, more realistic, more attuned to the real needs of real
           people’.
               Posner (1995, 19). A similar concern was voiced by the Dutch
               author Maurits Barendrecht (2003), who argued that private law
               may not sufficiently reflect the ‘interests, the real preferences of
               people’. Naturally, one can always debate what the real interests
               of people are.
           If law is seen as an instrument to achieve a previously set aim,
           empirical research is inevitable in determining whether this
           goal has really been achieved and whether the chosen approach
           has worked. However, one should not overestimate the impor-
           tance of empirical research (see also supra, no. 16). There are
           three reasons why this approach cannot be the decisive factor.
              First, not all law is instrumental. In the prevailing view, the
           law still has its own rationality and its success is not dependent
           on the extent to which it can realize a political goal or serve as
           an instrument. A different view would not be very democratic
           since one of the main functions of law is to offer a counter-
           weight to the majority that is setting the goal to be achieved.
           To claim that the law serves an external goal makes the law
           itself completely dependent on the desires of the majority. This
           would characterize the law as a non-normative discipline.
               An illustration of how ‘law as a means to an end’ can form a
               threat to the rule of law see Tamanaha (2006) and cf. Watson
               (2006, 212–213). In particular, Weinrib (1995, 6) explains why
               it would be wrong to see law only as an instrument: ‘Because
               the functionalist goals are justifiable independently and the
               law’s purpose is to reflect them, the study of the law becomes
               parasitic on the study of the non-legal disciplines (economics,
               political theory, and moral philosophy) (. . .) that might validate
               these goals. (. . .) Law provides only the authoritative form into
               which the conclusions of non-legal thinking are translated. The
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             68                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  governing presupposition is that the content of law cannot be
                  comprehended in and of itself, simply as law.’ The functionalist is
                  trapped in his view that the law only serves, while in reality it also
                  determines reality as the conceptual apparatus of the law creates
                  its own reality. See also Feinman (1989, 663), quoted supra, no. 9.
             Once again, this does not mean that empirical work is not
             useful. On the contrary, if a rule aims to achieve a certain
             aim (promote road safety, protect the weaker party, or avoid
             crime), there is every reason to establish the extent to which
             this rule is able to succeed in its task. However, one should not
             make this the only decisive criterion with which to measure
             success: empirical evidence cannot be decisive in a normative
             approach. This leads me to two other objections.
                First, the results of empirical research only rarely point in
             one direction. Even if a theme is very well researched, such
             as the famous question about the deterrent effect of capital
             punishment, views remain divided about what the empirical
             evidence actually proves.
                  This debate received new impetus after Cass Sunstein and Adrian
                  Vermeule showed, on the basis of recent empirical materials,
                  that carrying out the death penalty can have a significant deter-
                  rent effect on prospective criminals. In their view, each execution
                  would deter some eighteen murders. On the basis of this ‘life-life
                  trade-off’ there would no longer be a moral argument against the
                  death penalty: banning execution is equivalent to condemning as
                  yet unidentified innocent people to a premature and violent death.
                  The government, as a moral agent, must then look after the inter-
                  ests of these innocent people. The arguments that errors can be
                  made in convicting people and that an execution is irreversible are
                  not convincing enough: ‘a legal regime with capital punishment
                  predictably produces far fewer arbitrary and irreversible deaths
                  than a regime without capital punishment’ (Sunstein & Vermeule
                  2006, 731). The reliability of the empirical materials was subse-
                  quently disputed by, among others, Donohue and Wolfers (2006).
                  After the US Supreme Court had extensively cited Sunstein &
                  Vermeule in Baze v. Rees (553 U.S. 35 (2008)) – in which carrying
                  out the death penalty by injection was not held to be a violation
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science          69
               of the Constitution – even Sunstein retreated from the evidence
               he had previously characterized as ‘powerful’ and ‘impressive’.
               Sunstein and Wolfers (2008) subsequently claimed that ‘the best
               reading of the accumulated data is that they do not establish a
               deterrent effect of the death penalty’.
                  Another well-researched topic concerns the question of whether
               a ban on tobacco advertising leads to a fall in the number of
               smokers. Here too, the answer is not clear. Schneider et al. (1981)
               show that an advertising ban may help reduce tobacco consump-
               tion among young people, but also conclude that adult smokers
               are not significantly affected by it. Others dispute this seemingly
               clear conclusion: see the overview by Saffer & Chaloupka (2000).
               Also, the claim that common law jurisdictions are more conducive
               to economic development than civil law jurisdictions will prob-
               ably remain disputed in perpetuity. The latest development in this
               subject is the conflict between the empirical materials provided by
               Shleifer & Glaeser (2002) and the data of others that points in a
               different direction (cf. Faure & Smits 2011).
           The final point is that, although empiricists often claim that
           they can provide lawyers with objective (non-normative)
           knowledge, a closer inspection of their claims reveals that this
           is not really the case. Both the question of what is actually the
           problem and what is its solution require a normative evalu-
           ation. In the end, even the empirical method cannot avoid
           entanglement with the normative.
               This is apparent from the view often held by pragmatists that the
               law does not primarily reflect the intention of the legislature nor
               should it be seen as a doctrinal system, but instead it serves to
               solve a ‘real’ problem. However, this is not the traditional task
               of the lawyer: it is not social reality that is the object of his study,
               but – in the wording of Geoffrey Samuel (2009, 26) – the virtual
               reality of the legal system, in which the objects derive their value
               only from their place within this system. This does not mean that
               lawyers cannot tackle this problem-solving task, but one must
               be cognizant that, under that scenario, the distinction between
               a lawyer and a social worker starts to blur. Under the pragmatic
               (‘what works?’) approach to law, differences of opinion about the
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             70                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  nature of the problem, its importance, and possible solutions will
                  persist. Regarding this last aspect (the solution to the problem),
                  the stone of wisdom is sometimes sought in a procedure instead
                  of in a particular substantive rule. This can be at an abstract level
                  (as in John Rawls’ A Theory of Justice (1999), which attempts to
                  avoid normative conflicts of opinion by starting from a hypotheti-
                  cal process of decision-making), but also at the level of an actual
                  dispute by creating a ‘neutral’ procedure of conflict resolution. In
                  both cases a problem remains: the abstract level leaves open what
                  should be the outcome in a dispute while, at the substantive level,
                  the adequacy of the procedure can be questioned. Singer (2009,
                  907) states: ‘The unavoidable fact is that no matter how hard
                  we try to define impartial decision procedures, we face persistent
                  disagreement both about basic notions of what is good and right
                  and just and about which procedures are suitably impartial.’
             36.     What Ought to Be? Fundamental Rights as Cornerstones
             The final method of establishing what ought to be in law that
             is discussed here consists of references to fundamental rights.
             It is often asserted that it may be true that one can doubt
             the appropriateness of ‘normal’ rules or their application
             but fundamental rights are cornerstones for deciding what
             people ought to do. For example, one could argue that there
             is no need to debate the value of the principle of equality and
             freedom of speech. This argument, however, is not entirely
             true. First, one only needs to skim any newspaper to see
             how much debate there is over what freedom of speech actu-
             ally means. The conflagration spreading across Europe over
             what it means to ‘insult’ Muslims is a clear example of this.
             Secondly, even if consensus exists about the exact contents of a
             fundamental right, this right will, in an actual dispute, almost
             always conflict with another fundamental right. Finally, even
             the basic acceptance of some fundamental rights is debated, in
             particular with regard to religious orthodoxies.
                  Cf. Singer (2009, 922): in so far as fundamental rights are undis-
                  puted, they are not sufficiently well defined to decide specific
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science     71
               cases. Singer’s point is confirmed by the debate in Europe about
               the extent to which fundamental rights can offer guidance in
               deciding cases between private parties. Although it was claimed
               that they can have a harmonizing effect (Mak 2007), this is in
               practice not so evident. In particular, human dignity is a prob-
               lematic ‘universal’ right: case law shows that there is much doubt
               about what it actually requires. In the ‘wrongful birth’ cases, as
               decided by different national courts, references are often made to
               human dignity or some similar concepts but only to support con-
               flicting views. Some of the highest courts in Europe have referred
               to the general personality right of the child (and the child’s
               dignity) in addressing the question of whether the parents can
               claim damages from a doctor for the rearing of the child in cases
               where a doctor’s malpractice (a failed vasectomy or other contra-
               ceptive treatment) led to an unwanted pregnancy. However, this
               did not lead to a single uniform outcome: different senates of the
               German Bundesverfassungsgericht (BVerfGE 96, 375 and 88, 203)
               are divided and the Dutch Hoge Raad allows compensation (NJ
               1999, 145). the British House of Lords held in MacFarlane and
               Another v. Tayside Health Board ([1999] 4 All ER 963) through
               Lord Steyn: ‘Relying on principles of distributive justice I am
               persuaded that our tort law does not permit parents of a healthy
               unwanted child to claim the cost of bringing up the child from a
               health authority or a doctor’. Whether the personality right of the
               child or the autonomy of the parents should prevail is therefore
               disputed (see also Lord Millet in Darlington Memorial Hospital
               v. Rees, [2004] 1 AC 309 for an emphasis on the autonomy of the
               parents).
                  European and international case law also shows how a concept
               like human dignity lends itself to many different interpretations.
               In the Omega-case (C-36/02, [2004] ECR I-09609), the European
               Court of Justice explicitly refused to give one European interpre-
               tation of what human dignity entails. In the famous Wackenheim
               case, the United Nations Human Rights Committee concluded
               that the French authorities were allowed to ban ‘dwarf tossing’
               on the grounds of protecting the human dignity of someone who,
               being 1.14 m. tall, made it his profession to be thrown onto an
               airbed by clients of a discotheque (Wackenheim/France, U.N.
               Doc. CCPR/C/75/D /854/1999). However, one can also argue
               for the opposite result by claiming that human dignity does not
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             72                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  mean protection of the supposedly weaker party but should be
                  recognized through the autonomy of a contracting party who
                  wants to earn a living by freely choosing this line of work. See
                  Kant (1785[2002, 436]): ‘Autonomy is therefore the ground of the
                  dignity of human nature and of every rational nature’. See also,
                  with more details, Smits (2008a).
             This also means that reasoning in terms of fundamental rights
             is an inherently normative activity: undisputed rights do not
             exist and, in so far as they are generally recognized, they are so
             indeterminate that they offer only little guidance in deciding a
             dispute.
                  The discussion about fundamental rights often takes place in
                  terms of conflicts between rights: if one party invokes a funda-
                  mental right, the other party is often able to invoke another one,
                  prompting the need to balance them both. In the famous German
                  suretyship case (BVerfG 19 October 1993, NJW 1994, 36), the
                  21-year-old daughter of a businessman agreed to stand surety for
                  an amount of more than 100 000 DM (approximately €51 000) for
                  her father’s debt to a bank. She did so by signing a pre-printed
                  form at the request of a bank employee, who told her: ‘Would you
                  just sign here, please? You are not entering into any important
                  obligation: I need this for my files’. The daughter was not very
                  well-educated, was unemployed most of the time, and when she
                  did work (usually in a Hamburg fish factory) she earned an income
                  of only 1150 DM (approximately €590) per month. When her
                  father was no longer able to pay his debts, the bank turned to his
                  daughter. The German Federal Supreme Court held her bound to
                  the contract, reasoning that any adult person knows that signing
                  a contract of suretyship entails a certain risk. The consequence
                  of its judgment was that she not only had to pay 100 000 DM,
                  but also a high monthly interest of 708 DM. In order to meet the
                  monthly subsistence level, she had to earn at least 1800 DM, an
                  income she had never had in her life and was unlikely to receive
                  in the future. This would have been the end of the matter if the
                  daughter had not appealed to the German Constitutional Court,
                  claiming that her fundamental right to private autonomy (art.
                  2 of the German Constitution), in conjunction with her human
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science       73
               dignity, was violated by the civil court. Against this claim based
               on her dignity, the bank (unsuccessfully) invoked another funda-
               mental right: the freedom of contract that it had exercised that
               compelled the daughter to honour her contract. This illustrates
               very well that, in a conflict among private parties, both sides can
               often invoke a right that is seen as fundamental. The question of
               which right ought to prevail requires a normative decision.
           37.     Intermediate Conclusion: Normative Uncertainty is Both
                   Inevitable and Desirable
           The clear conclusion to be drawn from the sections above is
           that it seems impossible to give one uniform answer to what
           one legally ought to do. Not only does the traditional doctri-
           nal approach fail to give any definitive answers in the abstract
           or in deciding an actual case, but neither does reasoning on
           the basis of fundamental rights or making use of non-legal
           methods lead to any definitive answers.
               This does not mean that these approaches are not useful (and
               this is not disputed at all for the other types of legal science dis-
               tinguished supra, no. 5): they can even be of great service to the
               normative approach. But it does mean that we need to re-think,
               for each case, how precisely these insights can be beneficial in the
               field of law. See also Samuel (2008, 314).
           If this conclusion is accepted, we can identify two different
           courses that are open. One way would consist of a continued
           search for a method that could put an end to normative uncer-
           tainty. However, I propose a different way. I am convinced
           that the core of the legal approach is to recognize existing
           uncertainty: the law can be reduced to disputes about what
           legally ought to be. This means that we should not try to elimi-
           nate normative uncertainty, but should take it as the starting
           point of legal scholarship: if consensus about the normative
           cannot be reached, we should not strive for it. This means that
           it is not only inevitable that one can dispute the right outcome,
           it is also desirable. Contrary to what is advertised in the
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             74                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             American Declaration of Independence, ‘self-evident’ truths
             do not exist in reality.
                  Put more bluntly, a claim that suggests any of the methods
                  reviewed here is capable of delivering definitive results is a ruse
                  at best. This view fits in with a longstanding tradition. Aristotle
                  (340 BC [1934, 7]), Grotius and Erasmus (both referred to supra,
                  no. 30) all agreed that morality and law cannot offer mathemati-
                  cal certainty and therefore the nature of the law as an academic
                  discipline stands in the way of reaching consensus. Cf. Singer
                  (2009, 911): ‘normative argument is inescapable’ and Rubin
                  (1988, 1853), who makes references to the ‘irreducible normativ-
                  ity’ of law. This need for permanent debate is therefore the only
                  right point of departure.
             Now that (normative) legal scholarship has been defined
             as a discipline of conflicting arguments, we will explore the
             consequences of this view in the next section.
             2.     TOWARDS AN EMPIRICAL-NORMATIVE
                    APPROACH
             38.     Are Personal Preferences Decisive?
             The argument up to this point can easily be summarized. It
             consists of two consecutive steps. In step one, the question
             of what people and organizations are legally obliged to do
             was identified as the core question of legal science. It was also
             made clear why this question cannot be answered by relying
             on the authority of institutions, such as legislatures and courts.
             In step two, the lack of uniformity in answering the question
             of what one legally ought to do was explained: law is a pre-
             eminently argumentative discipline. It is now time to take a
             third step: what does this view mean for the methodology of
             normative legal science?
                It should be noted, first, that within normative legal science,
             law has not become a matter of personal (political) views,
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science        75
           although some would disagree with this assertion. Both Ed
           Rubin and Martijn Hesselink state that this should be the
           case, based on the presumption that individuals have different
           views about the right values in society and that, accordingly,
           the academic method must also consist in making explicit
           one’s own (for example liberal or social-democrat) normative
           presuppositions. Or, in other words, whether a certain legal
           argument can be accepted depends on one’s view of what is an
           ideal society.
               See Rubin (1988, 1893) and Hesselink (2009, 35). The latter
               argues that each legal academic should therefore indicate on his
               website, or in the publication itself, his political preferences. Only
               after a transparent disclosure of these preferences can one truly
               determine whether someone’s views about the law are consistent.
                  Another reaction to the idea that what one legally ought to do
               is inherently uncertain, is to emphasize the importance of rhetoric
               in legal discourse. Law does not then find its foundation in some
               objective criterion, but in convincing others of the rightness of
               one’s own arguments. Thus, Chaïm Perelman (1980, 129) claims
               that legal reasoning is nothing more than ‘an argumentation
               aiming to persuade and convince those whom it addresses, that
               such a choice, decision or attitude is preferable to concurrent
               choices, decisions and attitudes’. However, a problem with this
               view is that the question whether an argument is convincing for
               the other party, or for the forum or public at large, cannot be
               answered without consulting existing law: the successful orator
               will always have to give substantive reasons that matter to the
               law. This being the case, rhetoric will have to rest on a firmer
               foundation than just the power of persuasion.
           In my view, this approach to what people ought to do in law
           is too dependent on the political views of an individual. The
           consequence of this would be that any sensible debate about
           what is the right view is, in the end, no longer possible. A
           proponent, for example, of more social justice in the law can
           simply tell others that their view is just an opinion, as much as
           his, without any need to persuade the other. This would end
           all discussion.
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             76                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  See also Singer (2009, 902): the choice for a particular solution is
                  then no longer determined by a rational balancing of arguments,
                  but has become a matter of faith. Moreover, an overall politi-
                  cal view will – again – only seldom lead to guidelines on how to
                  decide actual cases.
             39.     The Empirical-Normative Method
             My point of departure is therefore elsewhere. Even though one
             can always debate what people legally ought to do, guidance
             can be derived from existing normative frameworks. The type
             of guidance that I am advocating, however, is different from
             the usual kind. Existing law is mostly studied as a whole body
             of authoritative statements made by institutions. This system
             is usually consulted in order to establish how the positive law
             reads – a method that was set aside before and labelled as insuf-
             ficiently academic. What is therefore needed is a shift in perspec-
             tive: existing jurisdictions should be considered as providing
             empirical material on how to deal with conflicting arguments.
             The academic method then consists of bringing these arguments
             into the open and discussing the consequences of choosing one
             argument over others. In this new perspective, case law and leg-
             islation are no longer authoritative statements about what is law
             within a certain jurisdiction but, rather, a source of information
             about the power of a particular normative argument.
                  This means that the law is no longer studied as a system of binding
                  decisions (flowing from the formal sources of law) or as a functional
                  system (emphasising the extent to which law realizes an external
                  goal), but as a normative system where arguments can be put
                  forward in favour of and against certain outcomes. This is a way to
                  act upon the call made by Singer (2009, 931) to develop ‘structures
                  of normative reasoning that recognize the inevitability both of con-
                  troversial normative premises and procedures (. . .)’ with the added
                  benefit of allowing us to learn from experiences elsewhere.
             This method can be defined as the empirical-normative
             method. Under this approach, existing jurisdictions are
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science       77
           treated as laboratories for dealing with conflicting normative
           positions. They show which arguments exist in favour of, and
           against, any particular solution, which arguments have pre-
           vailed elsewhere and how the result has been received in that
           jurisdiction. These insights can be made accessible for one’s
           own jurisdiction through comparison.
               This method combines the benefits of the normative approach
               (that is, what ought to be is a matter of which argument carries
               most weight) with those of an empirical approach (that is, by con-
               sidering how this argument functions elsewhere and how it could
               function in one’s own jurisdiction). Other than for the strictly
               empirical approach discussed earlier (no. 16), this has the advan-
               tage that empirical insights will already have been translated into
               the legal context. The insight into how arguments function may
               also be derived from one’s own jurisdiction but in my view this
               is an approach that is too thin (see infra). The ultimate goal of
               legal scholarship is to explore conflicting normative positions
               and the best way to do this is by comparing situations in different
               jurisdictions. See also Rubin (1988, 1893) and Schoordijk (1972),
               who emphasizes that the task of the jurist is to explore all possible
               cases.
                  The metaphor of jurisdictions as laboratories can be traced
               back to the famous statement of Louis Brandeis in New State
               Ice Co. v. Liebmann (285 U.S. 262 (1932)): ‘To stay experimen-
               tation in things social and economic is a grave responsibility.
               Denial of the right to experiment may be fraught with serious
               consequences to the Nation. It is one of the happy incidents of the
               federal system that a single courageous State may, if its citizens
               choose, serve as a laboratory; and try novel social and economic
               experiments without risk to the rest of the country.’
           The empirical-normative method needs to make use of materi-
           als from different jurisdictions: to consider only one’s own law
           is too meagre an academic approach to law. Comparison with
           other jurisdictions, and even with other normative systems
           (such as ethics and social norms), shows how solutions adopted
           elsewhere function. This may mean that the factual situation
           elsewhere – the realization that some rule fulfils a useful
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             78                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             function – can lead to the normative judgment that this should
             also be accepted as the right one for one’s own jurisdiction.
                  Present-day comparative law is primarily aimed at a comparison
                  of national jurisdictions. Glenn (2003, 844) rightly points out
                  that normative judgements should not exclusively be found in the
                  law of states. Instead, a ‘method of normative reasoning, within
                  and across state law’ must be developed. In the famous English
                  case of McFarlane v. Tayside Health Board (2000 SC (HL) 15),
                  Lord Steyn held: ‘The discipline of comparative law does not aim
                  at a poll of solutions adopted in different countries. It has the
                  different and inestimable value of sharpening our focus on the
                  weight of competing considerations’. This well reflects what legal
                  comparison is about: it is by comparing that one realizes that an
                  acceptance of a different argument can lead to better outcomes.
                  One does not need a tertium comparationis (see supra, no. 15) for
                  this: the mere fact that cases are not completely comparable is not
                  a barrier to learning from elsewhere. See on incommensurability
                  also infra, no. 46.
             In an increasing number of cases, courts refer to foreign laws
             to establish the value of particular arguments. A well-known
             American example concerns the constitutionality of the death
             penalty for crimes committed by 16- and 17-year olds. The
             United States Supreme Court found support for its view that
             execution is not permitted in these cases, basing its argument
             in part on the fact that ‘the overwhelming weight of interna-
             tional opinion’ is against the death penalty for juveniles. An
             argument cannot be derived only from how a rule is perceived
             elsewhere, but it is possible to look at other jurisdictions to
             consider the effect of a rule. When debating the question of
             the legal drinking age, inspiration can be drawn from jurisdic-
             tions where this age is 16 (Italy), 18 (Spain), 20 (Japan) or 21
             (United States) years, or completely absent (Albania), and the
             effects of these differences can be established.
                  See Roper v. Simmons (543 U.S. 551 (2005)). See also Justice
                  Breyer’s dissent in Printz v. United States (521 U.S. 898, at 977
                  (1997)): ‘we are interpreting our own Constitution, not those of
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science      79
               other nations, and there may be relevant political and structural
               differences between their systems and our own. But their experi-
               ence may nonetheless cast an empirical light on the consequences
               of different solutions to a common legal problem.’ Markesinis
               & Fedtke (2005, 97–98) and Dannemann (2006, 396) also point
               to this empirical use of foreign law: comparison can show the
               consequences of rules and how they should be evaluated. As an
               example, Dannemann (2006, 398) mentions the newly established
               rule in Germany that no longer requires all family members
               (husband, wife and their common children) to have the same
               surname. Before this change, it was feared that it could lead to
               tensions within the family. But, in Latin America there is no uni-
               formity of surnames within the family and this does not mean that
               family ties are any weaker. Another example concerns the right to
               cure malperformance of a contract as it exists under German law
               (see infra, no. 42). Acceptance of such a right does not necessarily
               make the law of contractual remedies more difficult to deal with,
               as the Dutch legislature once feared.
           There is, however, an important difference between a court’s
           reasoning and legal scholarship. While the court (or legisla-
           tor) will eventually have to make a choice and one argument
           will prevail over the others, legal scholarship can confine itself
           to sketching alternative approaches and thinking through
           the relevant arguments. Legal academics can thus greatly
           contribute to the making of a better decision but they cannot
           control whether practice will make use of the insights they
           provide: this is a matter for the institutions. In other words,
           while legal science casts doubt, legal practice aims to end all
           uncertainty.
               Legislators and courts have themselves been inspired by foreign
               laws because they are interested in the arguments used by their
               counterparts elsewhere. Whether liability for pure economic loss
               should exist is not dependent on the question of whether English
               or French law allow this, but on the substantive arguments that
               plead in favour of or against this solution and that may have been
               discussed in an illuminating way in a foreign decision, a legisla-
               tive memorandum, or even a textbook. Eventually, however,
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             80                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  the national legislator or court will need to decide for itself what
                  it considers to be the best outcome for its own jurisdiction. The
                  legitimacy of such a comparative inspiration is almost undisputed
                  in Europe. It is even seen as counterproductive not to profit from
                  insights obtained elsewhere (even though this may not happen as
                  frequently as one would wish). The basis of this view is that no
                  one jurisdiction is unique.
                     As popular as this view is in Europe, its value is heavily debated
                  (at least so far as the judiciary is concerned) in the United States.
                  The reason for this is best explained by US Supreme Court Justice
                  Antonin Scalia (1996), who wrote: ‘We judges of the American
                  democracies are servants of our peoples, sworn to apply (.  .  .)
                  the laws that those peoples deem appropriate. We are not some
                  international priesthood empowered to impose upon our free
                  and independent citizens supra-national values that contradict
                  their own.’ The American Constitution, in particular, is a unique
                  expression of the nation and the task of the judge is to help form
                  this nation by respecting the Constitution. When the United
                  States Supreme Court in Roper v. Simmons (see supra) referred
                  to the international consensus, Scalia heavily criticized this: ‘I do
                  not believe that the meaning of (. . .) our Constitution should be
                  determined by the subjective views of five Members of this Court
                  and like-minded foreigners (. . .).’
             As well as adopting ideas from foreign arguments, legal schol-
             ars can also investigate the adaptability of these arguments
             within their own jurisdiction: one argument may be better
             than another because it fits better with the existing normative
             framework. The question of whether the doctrine of leasio
             enormis should be accepted, or to what extent the consumer
             needs to be protected against a professional party, can thus
             also be answered within a certain jurisdiction.
                The remainder of this chapter will elaborate on this particu-
             lar method. Attention will first (no. 40) be paid to the need for
             a new type of (normative) scholarship that is devoted to the
             identification of arguments. This is not only important to the
             study of national law, but also for newly established interna-
             tional fields such as European private law or European crimi-
             nal law. The age-old method of formulating and applying
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science      81
           rules no longer seems fit for this field (no. 41). Next, the extent
           to which legal scholarship must search for universal principles
           is considered (no. 42), a question also relevant to deciding
           when we can speak of legal uniformity (no. 43). Finally, the
           proposed approach calls into question how to decide a dispute
           and what is the role of doctrine in doing so (nos. 44–46).
           40.     An Argumentative Discipline
           In the last two centuries, legal science has largely focused on
           formulating rules and creating doctrinal systems. Not only did
           the legislature draft rules through, for example, comprehensive
           codifications of private and criminal law, legal science played
           the role of a critical follower of the authoritative institutions.
              This emphasis on the importance of rules and of the legal
           system is understandable from the internal perspective of legal
           scholarship, which has been noted previously. From this per-
           spective, there is little need to criticize the importance of the
           system of rules for reaching a decision in an actual case. Even
           if the outcome in a case does not automatically follow from
           the legal system, this is not a problem in a relatively homo-
           geneous national society: if there is one prevailing legal culture
           (‘morality’), the main actors in the legal community will know
           how to reach a reasonable outcome.
               Put differently, even if a rule does not determine its own field of
               application (see supra, no. 33), one does not have to reflect funda-
               mentally upon how a decision is to be taken: what the legal system
               means in an actual case is determined by its ‘internal morality’
               (Fuller, 1969, 33). This reflects the prevailing opinion of what is
               right. Even without relevant rules, one would probably come to a
               result that is generally accepted.
           There are two reasons why this view no longer reflects the
           present situation adequately. First, there is no longer one
           prevailing morality at the national level. Views on the right
           thing to do differ between groups on many issues. This calls
           for a greater emphasis on the process of argumentation and on
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             82                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             the question of why a certain outcome is reached. Reference
             to the existing legal system becomes less and less adequate.
             This means that legal science should be less focused on rules,
             the construction of the legal system, or finding the ‘right’
             outcome, and more on the relevant arguments, and the way in
             which a conflict between these arguments must be solved.
                  The less uniform the set of values a society has, the more substan-
                  tive reasoning it needs. The text and its interpretation are then less
                  important and one continuously needs to give reasons in favour
                  of, or against, a particular outcome. Atiyah (1980, 1255) describes
                  this development away from rules towards doing justice in the cir-
                  cumstances of the case as ‘a profound shift away from principles
                  to pragmatism’.
             Secondly, increasing Europeanization also leads to a legal
             science that is less focused on rules and systems and more on
             substantive reasoning. Except in so far as some very general
             principles, such as freedom of contract and protection of
             property, are concerned, a uniform European morality does
             not exist: even if uniform rules can be identified, they will be
             interpreted differently in various jurisdictions. This means
             that the emphasis should no longer be on the formulation and
             application of rules, but on the substantive arguments behind
             them. The German sociologist Ulrich Beck rightly claims that
             law, and the way in which we describe it, must be re-thought
             in the light of an increasing internationalization.
                  In the grandiloquent jargon of Beck (2003, 458), increasing
                  ‘denationalisation’ and ‘transnationalisation’ should lead us to
                  a ‘reconceptualisation’ of law within a new cosmopolitan frame-
                  work in order to avoid the legal discipline becoming ‘a museum
                  of antiquated ideas’. In the nation-state, law consists of rules that
                  have come into being on the authority of the relevant institu-
                  tions and which – if need be with the help of state power – can
                  be enforced by a democratically elected government (Morgan &
                  Yeung 2007, 303–304). The way in which law is usually described
                  is in conformity with this: to describe law by way of rules suggests
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science      83
               that these rules can be relatively easily applied, thus offering the
               necessary legal certainty and equality. Our understanding of the
               law is in this respect, largely determined by what rules can do at
               the national level (Twining & Miers 2010). A law that is not based
               on this process of national democratic decision-making should
               therefore preferably be described in another way, rather than
               through clear-cut rules.
           41.     Example: the Draft Common Frame of Reference for
                   European Private Law
           This plea that legal science should be turned into an argu-
           mentative discipline can be substantiated by reference to the
           recently published Draft Common Frame of Reference for
           European Private Law (DCFR). This document gives too
           little account of the function it has.
               The DCFR (Von Bar & Clive 2009a) aims to define principles,
               definitions and model rules for a European private law. It consists
               of detailed rules divided over ten ‘books’ and covers both the law
               of obligations and parts of property law. The DCFR is presented
               as an ‘academic’ text: it may be that the European legislature
               can make use of it in revising the existing acquis, but it has an
               autonomous role in teaching and research and in being a source
               of inspiration for national legislatures and courts.
                  I am of the opinion that the DCFR suffers from so-called
               ‘methodological nationalism’ (a term coined by the sociologist
               Herminio Martins; see Smits 2010): in drafting rules aimed to be
               used primarily as a non-binding source of inspiration, the draft-
               ers’ underlying presuppositions were based on the role of law in
               the nation-state. Our traditional way of thinking, as developed
               for law within a national society, is then transplanted to the
               European level. The DCFR is an example of drafting and struc-
               turing rules similar to a national code. There are three reasons
               why this can be qualified as methodological nationalism.
                  First, we should recognize that private law at the European
               level will continue to flow from various sources: there will be
               a continuous infusion of private law emanating not only from
               national and European sources, but also from private regulation.
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             84                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  This multi-layered structure of European private law prompts the
                  question, at which regulatory level are these issues best regulated?
                  The entire private law system can, in any event, no longer be gov-
                  erned by only one piece of legislation as this would be contrary
                  to the allocation of normative powers between the member states
                  and the European Union. The DCFR, however, seems to shows
                  little evidence of this insight that private law is a multi-layered
                  system (cf. supra, no. 17) since it aims to cover the whole of the
                  law of obligations and other parts of private law as if it were a
                  national code.
                     A second feature of national codifications is that there is
                  usually little doubt about what the relevant rules should be and
                  who should choose them. This is because, at the national level,
                  there usually is a generally accepted criterion to decide which
                  rules are to be incorporated in the code and because there is a
                  generally accepted procedure to adopt such rules (in most cases
                  a national democratic decision process). At the European level,
                  such consensus is lacking. This makes it all the more impor-
                  tant to make use of a clear method when deciding which rules
                  should be part of the DCFR and who should adopt the final text.
                  According to the drafters of the DCFR, its provisions are based
                  on a comparative analysis of the law of the member states and the
                  applicable European law. But this method is not very convincing
                  if one does not know how this comparative method was applied:
                  did the drafters look for the common denominator of the relevant
                  jurisdictions, or for the solution considered to be the ‘better’ one
                  and, if so, for what reason? Discussion about the contents of the
                  provisions is difficult if the drafters do not explain the motivations
                  behind their choice.
                     The final issue is whether the function of the DCFR has any-
                  thing to say about the way in which rules should be formulated.
                  In the nation-state, laws usually appear to consist of authoritative
                  rules backed by a coercive force that is exercised by legitimately
                  constituted democratic institutions. The way in which laws are
                  often represented matches these characteristics: describing the
                  law by way of rules implies that these rules can create the legal
                  certainty and equality needed to guide those affected by them. In
                  this sense, our understanding of rules is closely related to what
                  these rules can do at the national level: they organize society, pre-
                  suming that the rules came into being in a democratic process and
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science        85
               can therefore be enforced by the state institutions. It is thus the
               national democratic process that enables policy trade-offs to be
               made transparently and authoritatively. The question is whether
               law beyond the national state should be represented in the same
               way, in particular when – as is the case with the DCFR – the
               aim of the provisions is not to influence the conduct of private
               parties directly and be enforced, but to be primarily a source of
               inspiration. The answer must be in the negative: in my view, the
               functions of legal texts are largely dependent on how they are
               presented. Thus, a national civil code needs to be presented in
               a different way from a set of rules that should help to improve
               the existing acquis, should inspire legislators and courts across
               Europe or play a role in legal science and teaching. The rules are
               presently drafted as if they could be applied in the real world, but
               this is not the case (see supra, no. 40). My view is that they should
               reflect the competing principles that exist and how, despite differ-
               ences in outcome in actual disputes, similar arguments play a role
               in making choices among these principles. With this in mind, a
               more discursive text, sketching alternatives, is to be preferred. See
               also, with more details, Smits (2010).
           42.     Legal Science Not About Finding Universal Principles
           The view expressed above also has implications for whether
           legal science should search for universal principles. In the
           course of history, there has been a constant desire to find
           principles that are as certain as those in the natural sciences
           amongst the amorphous mass of rules and cases that inundate
           the legal field. However, as soon as the central question of legal
           scholarship is about what people should do as a matter of law,
           the value of drafting principles is limited: any lawyer knows
           that, when a case has to be decided, legitimate principles will
           always contradict each other in the end.
               See, on the universal pretentions of legal science, also infra, no. 8.
               The recent phenomenon of academics looking for the principles
               of European private law (such as the PECL, the Principles of
               European Tort Law and the DCFR) is a distant echo of the uni-
               versalism practised by comparative lawyers in the early twentieth
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             86                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  century. Around that time, Raymond Saleilles, Edouard Lambert
                  and others aimed to uncover the common institutions and prin-
                  ciples to end what they considered to be only coincidental
                  differences among jurisdictions.
             Instead of drafting uniform rules or principles, the empha-
             sis should be on exposing the various arguments for and
             against particular solutions, and on exposing how these argu-
             ments work in different jurisdictions. Competition between
             arguments leads to progress because one can learn from
             experiences elsewhere.
                  See, on the importance of competition over legal rules (or argu-
                  ments or ideas) and the learning processes this generates, for
                  example, Wilhelmsson (2002) and Smits (2002b). This is also the
                  reason why I do not believe that the Draft Common Frame of
                  Reference for European Private Law shows ‘how much national
                  private laws resemble one another and have provided mutual
                  stimulus for development and indeed how much those laws may
                  be regarded as regional manifestations of an overall common
                  European legacy’ (Von Bar 2009b, 6). I am also convinced that,
                  in the field of private law, the European member states have a
                  lot in common (see infra, no. 43). But it seems wrong to conclude
                  this from merely being able to draft common principles. Whether
                  jurisdictions resemble one another only becomes clear if all the
                  relevant factors are taken into consideration. In doing so, it
                  may be more important to find uniformity in the use of similar
                  arguments than in common rules or case decisions: a common
                  text will necessarily be interpreted in different ways in different
                  countries.
                     An example of how identical arguments are weighed in different
                  ways concerns the question of whether a non-performing con-
                  tracting party has the right to a second chance, that is, to cure
                  its performance. This is the case in German law: where there is
                  late or deficient performance, the creditor is, in principle, only
                  allowed to terminate the contract (§ 323 BGB) or claim damages
                  in lieu of performance (§ 281 BGB) if he gave the debtor a period
                  of notice to repair his previous non-performance. This means that
                  the debtor has a Recht zur zweiten Andienung: he did something
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science       87
               wrong (delivered too late or performed defectively), but still has a
               second chance to repair his wrongdoing. With the revision of the
               German law of obligations in 2002, the German legislator thus
               explicitly strengthened the rights of the seller against the buyer,
               who already receives ample protection by way of European
               directives.
                  Dutch law does not recognize this right to a second chance to
               perform. Where there is non-performance, it is enough to show
               the default of the debtor. This means, for example, that if a time
               was set for performance, and this time has passed, the creditor
               can immediately claim damages. The only thing the creditor
               needs to do is to send an omzettingsverklaring (art. 6:87 BW):
               the written announcement that he now claims damages in lieu
               of performance. In the case of termination, a written statement
               that the contract is terminated suffices (art. 6:267 BW). This
               does of course not mean that it is impossible in Dutch law to
               set extra time for performance: the creditor has the option to
               do so, but the debtor has no right to it. In this respect, Dutch
               law is like the PECL, which holds in art. 8:106 that the creditor
               may fix an additional period for performance. This is a case of
               Selbstbindung by the creditor: the creditor binds himself and can
               therefore not claim performance or termination during the set
               period.
                  All in all, it can be concluded that German law goes further in
               protecting the debtor against the enforcement of remedies by the
               creditor than Dutch law. This leads me to the question, ‘Which
               system can be considered the better one?’ ‘What are the policy
               reasons behind allowing the debtor a second chance to perform?’
               I think there are two. First, there is the binding force of contract:
               if a party is allowed a second chance to perform, the contract will
               remain binding for a longer period of time. This is in line with the
               idea that once a contract is made, it should be upheld as long as
               possible and there have to be very good reasons to terminate or
               to claim damages instead of the specified performance. The mere
               passing of a fatal date may not then be enough. Secondly – and
               related to the first argument – the possibility of a rather quick
               termination, or allowing a damages claim, may lead to all kinds
               of complications. The amount of damages has to be assessed
               and, if the contract was already partly executed, the performance
               needs to be redressed, which can be difficult. This means there is
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             88                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  an important incentive for the parties to simply perform instead
                  of entering into these difficult questions.
                     The next logical question is whether there are any arguments
                  against a right to cure the malperformance. One is the moral
                  argument that the debtor did something wrong when he failed to
                  perform in a timely manner and that this in itself should allow the
                  creditor to claim damages or (under certain circumstances) termi-
                  nation of the contract. The Dutch legislator considered the adop-
                  tion of the second chance to perform, but rejected it for exactly
                  this reason. He also stated that Dutch legal practice would favour
                  the possibility of the creditor immediately suing the debtor.
                  However, it can be doubted whether this is really true. According
                  to the case law of the Dutch Supreme Court (e.g. Hoge Raad 4
                  February 2000, NJ 2000, 258 (Kinheim/Penders)), the right of the
                  debtor ‘to try again’ is seen as important. Also, the European
                  directive 1999/44 on the sale of consumer goods gives the seller
                  the right to repair or replace them. This seems to be evidence of
                  a tendency to allow a contracting party to correct his or her mis-
                  takes. Another reason why the Dutch legislator refused to allow
                  the debtor a second chance to perform was that the alternative
                  was ‘simpler’. However, this is difficult to see: a system in which
                  the creditor first needs to set extra time for performance before
                  he can claim damages or termination is not necessarily more
                  complicated. See Smits (2008b).
                     Weighing identical arguments thus leads to different outcomes.
                  However, the temptation must be resisted to distil an abstract
                  principle from this, which can only lead to what Clifford Geertz
                  once called a ‘skeletonization of fact’: a dilemma is then reduced
                  to an abstraction for the sake of finding consensus. This is – in the
                  vivid language of Lawrence Friedman (Legrand 1997, 59) – as if
                  one ‘took fields of living law, scalded off their flesh, drained off
                  their blood, and reduced them to bones’.
             43.     When Should There Be Uniformity of Law?
             The mere fact that the application of rules or principles will
             lead to different outcomes in different jurisdictions should
             indeed be a reason to speak about uniformity. Rather, the use
             of similar arguments is the criterion to judge legal uniformity.
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science        89
               The question of when exactly legal uniformity comes into existence
               can be answered in different ways. Thus, one can find uniformity in
               rules and in how these are applied by the courts. This means that,
               in order to be able to speak of uniformity, the law must consist
               of similar rules being applied in a uniform way throughout the
               European Union. However, this is a problematic criterion because
               such convergence does not even exist at the national level: differ-
               ent judges within one country can decide a similar case in different
               ways. And yet, this type of convergence is often meant when legal
               unification is being discussed in the European context. The provi-
               sions of the PECL and DCFR are written to help in achieving this
               type of convergence by way of rules. A lower level of unification is
               aimed at if commonalities are sought in principles or fundamen-
               tal rights. A third possible criterion is whether the applied rules
               or achieved outcomes are functionally similar. Uniform law then
               exists if an identical goal (for example protection of the consumer
               or prevention of unfair competition) is achieved.
                  I believe that there ought to be another criterion in this discus-
               sion, which is whether different jurisdictions use similar argu-
               ments. In this respect, it is not relevant whether these arguments
               are given different weights (see also supra, no. 42). For example, it
               does not matter if German law regards a given prescription period
               as absolute while Dutch law does not if there is evidence of excep-
               tional circumstances. It also does not matter that views of the
               legality of ‘dwarf tossing’ differ amongst jurisdictions (see supra,
               respectively, no. 33 and no. 36) so long as, in giving a judgment, all
               relevant arguments were weighed.
                  This view fits in well with the experience of the only real
               common law system that exists at present: that of England and
               its former colonies. Within common law countries, there is
               already a strong sense that the type of reasoning defended above
               is conducive to legal development. In particular, courts within
               the British Commonwealth tend to be inspired by arguments
               used by their foreign colleagues (see Smits 2006), even though
               this does not imply that the common law is identical everywhere.
               In the New-Zealand case of Invercargill City Council v. Hamlin
               ([1996] 2 WLR 367), the Privy Council noted that the common
               law can differ, dependent on ‘general patterns of socio-economic
               behaviour’. Lord Lloyd of Berwick claimed that ‘the ability of
               the common law to adapt itself to the differing circumstances of
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             90                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  the countries in which it has taken root, is not a weakness, but
                  one of its great strengths’. This led the court to conclude that the
                  concept of negligence received a different meaning in the law of
                  New Zealand than in English law.
             This emphasis on arguments is also the core of the common
             European legal tradition of the ius commune as it existed before
             the national codifications of the nineteenth century. This ius
             commune never sought uniformity of rules, but was character-
             ized by a method focused on finding the best outcome, using a
             not so clearly defined pool of rules, principles and arguments.
             Based on these predispositions, Roman law was used as a
             source, not because there was any compelling duty to do so,
             but because the solutions offered were seen as having informa-
             tive value in arriving at the right decision. This is also why, if
             contemporary sources could contribute better to the goal of
             reaching the best outcome, they were given precedence over
             the received Roman law. This made the method pre-eminently
             an international one: there is no reason whatsoever to assume
             that arguments brought forward elsewhere would be of less
             importance than those accepted in one’s own country.
                  It was rare in the ius commune tradition for there to be a strict
                  duty to apply a certain rule to a case: how could it be otherwise
                  when the available materials were partly contradictory? In other
                  words, people drew inspiration from the rules that were seen to be
                  best for dealing with the case before the court. Roman law offered
                  an extensive inventory of solutions to legal problems but the
                  insights of contemporary authors were also used if this was found
                  to be useful. The way in which Derek van der Merwe (1996, 356)
                  defines the jurist in a mixed jurisdiction was also true for the ius
                  commune. He states that as an ‘instinctive eclectic: [the jurist] will
                  seek authority in the grand manner, the process of distilling legal
                  wisdom largely uninhibited by rigid doctrinal boundaries. Such a
                  state of mind is conducive to an unfussy flexibility in the applica-
                  tion of the law.’ See, with many details, Smits (2002a, 158 ff.).
                  Having said this, we can only concur with Zimmermann (1997,
                  293): ‘The essential prerequisite for a truly European private law
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science      91
               would appear to be the emergence of an “organically progres-
               sive” legal science, which would have to transcend the national
               boundaries and to revitalize a common tradition.’ The way to do
               this is to search for arguments used in the European jurisdictions.
           44.     Emphasis on Deciding Cases; Practical Wisdom
           It was emphasized in the section above that, in law, principles
           and arguments will always conflict and that the academic
           method should therefore consist of the identification and re-
           thinking of the relevant arguments. This makes it important
           to ask how, in practice, choices should be made so that one
           argument prevails over the other. This is also important for
           legal science: although it is not the primary task of legal aca-
           demics to decide actual cases, one can expect that they will
           demonstrate how to do this in the specific normative setting of
           a jurisdiction.
              The point of departure is what was earlier mentioned (for
           example, in no. 33) about the situation sense of the law: what
           ought to be in the actual case, can never be captured by rules
           or principles. The true decision will lie in balancing conflict-
           ing arguments: everyone accepts general principles such as
           equality, freedom of contract and protection of property, but
           what these principles really mean and how they conflict with
           each other only becomes clear when they are applied to a real
           case. This insight should lead to a re-evaluation of the law as
           practical wisdom. This view of the law, which disappeared over
           the horizon in the last few centuries due to the influence of the
           methodology of social and natural science, best fits the core
           activity of the jurist.
               Practical wisdom (phronesis in Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics) is
               the intellectual virtue of establishing what to do and which goals
               to achieve. In the work of Aristotle, it is distinct from sophia,
               which is concerned with universal truths (theoretical wisdom).
               Practical wisdom emphasizes that every case is unique and that
               it takes an experienced person to deal with it. Whilst sophia is
               only reflective, practical wisdom gives pride of place to the actual
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             92                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  making of a choice and to the arguments which are decisive in
                  doing this. Wisdom can be found in the many cases that have
                  been decided in the past but not so much in abstract rules and
                  principles.
                     Inspiration for a characterization of legal activity as practical
                  wisdom can be found in the work of Stephen Toulmin, Alasdair
                  MacIntyre and Martha Nussbaum. They all show how, before
                  the rise of rational positivism, methods existed to balance values
                  against each other in actual cases and how these methods made
                  way for a more reductionist model of judgment-making in the
                  seventeenth century under the influence of the rational positivist
                  paradigm of knowledge. Toulmin (1990, 30) captures the prevail-
                  ing academic method of the last 300 years well: ‘Formal logic was
                  in, rhetoric was out, general principles were in, particular cases
                  were out, abstract axioms were in, concrete diversity was out,
                  the permanent was in, the transitory was out.’ This led to ‘moral
                  algebra’, the almost mathematical balancing of values.
                     This narrative is consistent with how Schröder (2001, 23)
                  describes legal science: until the Enlightenment, the emphasis
                  was on finding the right solution (inventio) and making use of
                  catalogues of important viewpoints (topoi). The successful book,
                  Topica Iuris, Sive Loci Argumentorum Legales of 1516 is well
                  known. In it Nicolas Everaerts discusses more than 100 such
                  arguments. Around 1700, the use of topoi, as a way of determin-
                  ing the right outcome, was largely discarded to make way for sys-
                  tematization. Systematization, however, had its own limitations
                  because the legal system can never, in and of itself, offer results.
                     Now is the fitting time for accepting (again) that choices
                  among conflicting arguments can only be made in a practical
                  way. Nussbaum (1986) and MacIntyre (1981) rightly emphasize
                  that the weighing of interests is only possible in a real case and
                  that any more abstract rules necessarily have a ‘rule-of-thumb’
                  character. People do not make practical choices on the basis of
                  abstract truths or, as Holmes (1870, 1) stated: ‘it is the merit of
                  the common law that it decides the case first and determines the
                  principle afterwards’. This fits in with the plea that social sciences
                  should no longer be led by scientific methods, but should be prac-
                  tised primarily as phronetic social science. This view was expressed
                  by Bent Flyvbjerg (2001) who shows that, although social scien-
                  tists have long applied the idealisms of the natural sciences in their
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science       93
               studies, this has not led to the ability to explain or predict social
               reality. Social scientists should therefore do what they are good
               at, instead, which is to engage in the normative discussion about
               which values our society should strive for and how to accomplish
               these goals. In other words, in order to become relevant again,
               social sciences should inform us about practical reason.
           If legal practice is seen as a special form of applying practi-
           cal wisdom, this may mean that the decision-making process
           itself is not transparent. The mere reference to the experience
           (‘wisdom’) of the legal decision-maker does not reveal how
           this decision is made and that may invoke the criticism that the
           decision is, in the end, nothing but a ‘mystery’. It will become
           clear in no. 45 infra that this reproach is not justified.
               It may be surprising that Richard Posner (2003, 64) also recog-
               nizes that in a pragmatist view of law, the ultimate criterion for
               the court is reasonableness: ‘There is no algorithm for striking the
               right balance between rule-of-law and case-specific consequences
               (. . .). In fact, there isn’t too much more to say to the would-be
               pragmatic judge than make the most reasonable decision you can,
               all things considered’. Cf. Menand (1997).
           45.     The Importance of Legal Doctrine
           Practical wisdom depends to a large extent on the mature,
           yet subjective, view of the person making the decision. It is
           usually assumed that practical wisdom should also rest on a
           source of knowledge that is external to the decision-maker. As
           previously indicated (no. 39), doctrine (including previously
           decided cases) can fulfil this role in the empirical-normative
           approach, provided that it is regarded as providing empirical
           materials on how to deal with conflicting arguments.
               It would be going too far to consider at this point the exten-
               sive (philosophical) discussion about how to underpin practical
               wisdom. However, one important school claims that it is vital for
               practical wisdom to make use of external sources in establishing
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             94                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  what it entails. Thus, John Finnis (1997, 221) refers to moral-
                  ity and Millgram (1997, 161) to experience. Hsieh provides an
                  overview of the discussion (2011).
             Doctrine (‘dogmatics’) can be seen as representing the norma-
             tive complexity of the law: the thousands of rules and decided
             cases, each with their own nuances, show the many ways
             in which the law can deal with conflicting values. Doctrine
             thus reflects how subtle the law can often be and why a small
             change in the facts can lead to a wholly different outcome.
             The elaboration of the doctrinal system is therefore not an
             etheric activity unconnected to reality, but an essential part
             of a legal activity aiming to capture the subtleness of the law
             in words.
                  It must be repeated that the question of whether an argument
                  can be accepted within a particular jurisdiction can only be
                  answered in that jurisdiction’s normative context (see supra,
                  no. 40). Doctrine thus enlightens us about the prevailing norma-
                  tive approaches. It is therefore no coincidence that, despite fierce
                  attacks from several corners of academia, doctrine did survive.
                  S.D. Smith (1992, 629) states: ‘Indeed, to suggest that legal
                  scholarship should be less obsessed with doctrine would be like
                  suggesting that historians should not spend so much effort study-
                  ing things that happened in the distant past, or that astronomers
                  ought to worry more about earthly concerns instead of concen-
                  trating so exclusively on remote heavenly bodies.’ Each argument
                  must be passed through the filter of the legal system before it can
                  be accepted: the legal activity consists in great measure in feeling
                  out the system, turning each rule into a rule of thumb, and each
                  previous decision into a possible example of how to decide the
                  case in question. This is no easy task, and even if it may seem
                  easy initially, a competent lawyer will make it difficult, not to
                  keep himself busy but because he knows that subtle nuances are
                  relevant. Singer (2009, 938) puts it like this: ‘law is complicated
                  because qualitative distinctions matter, and they matter at this
                  level of detail’.
                     Legal doctrine not only fulfils a role as a source of practical
                  wisdom, but it has two other functions as well. First, it creates
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science     95
               a shared framework of texts, concepts and categories, without
               which a debate is not even possible. This is not only recognized
               in Europe (see, for example, Jansen 2005, 755), but also else-
               where. Tiller & Cross (2006, 1) rightly claim that ‘legal doctrine
               is the currency of the law’. Many legal questions cannot even
               exist without a doctrinal system. Thus, the question of whether
               a security right in a moveable asset (‘pledge’) must be registered
               or whether constitutional review is available cannot be answered
               without a legal framework. In this respect, doctrine creates the
               legal reality (cf. supra, no. 9).
                  Secondly, a doctrinal system can add to the coherence and
               lucidity of the law. The well-known criticism of the Critical Legal
               Studies movement (Unger 1986 and Kennedy 1976, 1685) that a
               doctrinal system has no other value than to disguise underlying
               contradictions is therefore far-fetched.
           As a result, the normative activity of the legal scholar will
           consist of two steps. First, the relevant arguments for and
           against a certain solution need to be identified and recon-
           sidered by making use of the empirical-normative method.
           Secondly, one can consider how these arguments fit into an
           existing normative setting (for example, a national jurisdic-
           tion). It is difficult to judge this in the abstract: the most con-
           vincing argument in the United States is not necessarily the
           same one as in Germany.
           46.     Which Argument Prevails? Comparison Without a
                   Tertium
           There is still another aspect of practical wisdom that needs
           attention. Comparison plays a fundamental role in the view
           of doctrine as empirical material in dealing with conflicting
           arguments. Such comparisons can take place at different
           levels. Thus, the decision for one argument to prevail over
           another in a particular case can be based on a comparison of
           similar cases. At a more abstract level, the acceptance of rules
           (or even of a whole normative system) can be made dependent
           on how to value this system in comparison with others.
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             96                     The mind and method of the legal academic
                  Jonsen & Toulmin (1988, 34) characterize very well the impor-
                  tance of comparison in the approach developed above (that it
                  does not search for the truth in a coherent and axiomatic system,
                  but in the experience laid down in actual decisions about unique
                  situations): ‘Practical arguments depend for their power on how
                  closely the present circumstances resemble those of the earlier
                  precedent cases for which this particular type of argument was
                  originally devised. So, in practical arguments, the truths and cer-
                  titudes established in the precedent cases pass sideways, so as to
                  provide “resolutions” of later problems (. . .).’
             Scholars of comparative law tend to stipulate that any mean-
             ingful comparison must be based on some objective criterion
             (the so-called tertium comparationis). The (still prevailing)
             functional comparative method is based on this idea. However,
             if the functional measure of the comparison is sought in a cri-
             terion that is external to the law (such as utility or welfare),
             it is still a non-normative factor that is used to determine the
             ‘better’ jurisdiction. This is at odds with the idea that practical
             wisdom makes use of existing experience in judging an argu-
             ment in a legal way. It is equally problematic that the func-
             tional approach brings diverse views of what people ought
             to do as a matter of law back to one common denominator.
             We saw earlier (for example, in no. 34) that this is impossible.
             The literature on pluralism of values shows that alternatives
             can be compared without having to fall back on some neutral
             measure.
                  In no. 15 supra, I have already argued that comparison without
                  a tertium comparationis is entirely possible, for example, by way
                  of a ‘comparative second-order language’. This would even be
                  necessary if no universal and absolutely valid value existed to
                  which all arguments can be reduced. As Schroeder (2002) writes:
                  ‘No single metric can capture the rich diversity of values’. See
                  also Nussbaum (1995, 14). This value pluralism presupposes that
                  many different values and goals are worth aiming for, but that this
                  can also lead to many conflicts among them, as in Isaiah Berlin’s
                  (1969) classic example of rival positive and negative liberty. This
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science       97
                can make it difficult to choose: ‘There is an objective moral order,
                but our perception of it is such that we cannot bring rival moral
                truths into complete harmony with each other. To choose does
                not exempt me from the authority of the claim which I choose to
                go against’ (MacIntyre, 1981, 143). This is expressed more vividly
                in Simon & Garfunkel’s ‘Mrs. Robinson’ (1967): ‘When you’ve
                got to choose, | Ev’ry way you look at it, you lose’.
                   Various authors have considered how, despite the existence of
                incommensurable values, one is able to reason in favour of one
                alternative or the other. Even if values cannot be measured on
                the basis of one common standard, alternative solutions can still
                be positively compared with each other. Hsieh (2011) gives an
                overview of proposed solutions on how to do this. For the legal
                discipline, Jonsen & Toulmin (1988, 330) show how the case at
                hand can be compared with previously decided paradigm cases.
                Ronald Dworkin’s (1986) view of common law jurisprudence as
                a chain novel also implies that comparison is possible without
                making use of an explicit external measure by finding analogies
                in a more subtle way. Lawyers, consciously or not, practise these
                insights on a daily basis. See also Dannemann (2006, 396ff.),
                with reference to John Stuart Mill’s ‘method of agreement’ and
                ‘method of difference’.
           3.     CONCLUSIONS
           47.     Summary
           This chapter started by asking how to determine what one
           is legally obliged to do if one cannot have recourse to the
           authority of legislatures and courts. It was argued in the sec-
           tions above that there is no one answer to this question and
           that the core of the academic study of law (at least in the
           normative approach) consists of showing time and again that
           one can dispute in perpetuity about what ought to be. The
           realm of legal science consists then of identifying and re-think-
           ing arguments, and of demonstrating how these arguments
           might fit the normative setting of a specific jurisdiction. The
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             98                     The mind and method of the legal academic
             accompanying method is the empirical-normative one: exist-
             ing jurisdictions can be seen as laboratories for how to manage
             conflicting normative positions. The eventual adoption of one
             argument as the stronger can only take place in the context
             of a particular jurisdiction. The way in which this decision is
             made is best described as an application of practical wisdom.
                  This plea will of course not be accepted if one believes that the
                  law is a question of authority and is only binding because of the
                  institutional place of the legislature and courts. See Collier (1991,
                  194). However, what Geoffrey Samuel (2008, 314) claims about
                  comparative lawyers is, in my view, true for any jurist: they must
                  work ‘within a spirit of enquiry rather than authority’.
             48.     Normative Scholarship as an Academic Discipline
             In no. 21 supra, three requirements were identified that any
             academic discipline should meet. Academic work does not
             only aim for the systematization of knowledge, but this
             knowledge must also have been obtained by a method that
             is recognized as valid by the academic community and must
             supersede that of a local authority. The question must now
             be answered to what extent normative legal scholarship meets
             these requirements.
                  No. 22 supra discussed how far the other (non-normative) types of
                  legal science discussed in Chapter I can meet the requirements of
                  an academic discipline. The mere fact that normative uncertainty
                  is an important characteristic of the law does not mean that aca-
                  demic work in law cannot meet these requirements. Uncertainty
                  does not rule out a rational approach or, as Singer (2009, 929)
                  says: ‘Perhaps reason can coexist with controversy.’
             It is beyond doubt that normative legal science can meet
             the first requirement. The proposed approach gives pride of
             place to the extension of the existing arsenal of legal know-
             ledge: instead of formulating and interpreting national rules,
             the emphasis is on the identification of arguments and on
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                                    Methodology of normative legal science     99
           investigating how these are weighed in different jurisdictions.
           This empirical material is stored in tens of thousands of rules
           and judicial decisions. This does imply, however, that we must
           search for new structures to categorize these arguments: the
           present systematic divisions along the lines of national legal
           systems must be abandoned.
              Normative legal science can also meet the second require-
           ment: legal science forms not only an academic practice (see
           supra, no. 21), but it can also adopt a clear research method
           by way of the proposed empirical-normative method that was
           explained above (no. 39). This requires a shift in perspective:
           case law and legislation should not be considered as sources
           of what the positive law says, but as empirical material about
           the strengths and weaknesses of certain normative arguments.
              Finally, the renewed attention to arguments means that
           legal science is no longer dependent on national law but has
           the potential to become a truly international discipline. It
           would be wrong to find the universal character of the legal
           discipline at the level of rules (as is the case in many projects
           in the field of European private law). This falsely suggests that
           these rules – with their pretence of being applicable – can be
           understood in the same way throughout Europe.
               In some fields, such as those of European private law and
               European constitutional law, an extensive international debate
               already exists. It is clear that in the view defended in this book,
               academic debate preferably takes place in English: if one’s aim
               is to identify and reflect upon arguments, one is not bound by
               national borders or by one’s own language. See also infra, no. 62.
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             IV.          Organization of the legal-
                          academic discourse
             1.     INTRODUCTION
             49.     Debate about Organization
             I commented in the Introduction that the present discussion of
             legal scholarship is not only about its aims and methods; it also
             deals with the way in which universities organize their research
             and teaching, assess their researchers, and classify their jour-
             nals. In this debate, there is often a surprising lack of awareness
             about the place of legal scholarship in comparison to other dis-
             ciplines. It is also not uncommon for views of how the legal dis-
             cipline should evolve to be primarily determined by concerns
             about its quality and funding, rather than by substantive issues.
                  In the Netherlands (cf. Stolker 2003 and 2005), the debate about
                  the academic aspirations of legal science was boosted by a concern
                  to defend legal research against other disciplines that do not take
                  it seriously enough. However, the themes discussed in this chapter
                  are not unique to legal research: many of the trends mentioned
                  below can be found in other academic disciplines as well (such as
                  the debate about methodology) or even in society as a whole (the
                  turn towards ‘market thinking’).
             This last chapter discusses several questions surrounding the
             organization of legal discourse. The views expressed follow
             partly from the view of legal scholarship that was defended in
             the previous sections, but it will also contain an independent
             analysis of the matter, equally taking into consideration types
             of legal research different from the normative variant (see
             supra, no. 5).
                                                100
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse      101
                The consequences of my proposed view of legal scholarship for
                aspects other than the organization of research are omitted from
                this book – even though these consequences do exist. One impor-
                tant result of the law being about conflicting normative positions
                lies, for example, in the organization of the highest courts: it can
                be argued that a system of concurring and dissenting opinions
                would lead to better argumentation than a system in which the
                court speaks with only one voice. The argument that introduc-
                ing dissenting opinions would not be conducive to collegiality,
                as the President of the Dutch Supreme Court Geert Corstens
                recently noted (Lindo 2009, 1078), seems an admission of weak-
                ness. Allowing the well-argued views of fellow judges to be heard
                could lead to a more open discussion among judges and in society,
                in particular, when there are controversial decisions. See Smith
                (2009) on the close link between allowing dissenting opinions and
                a jurisdiction’s aversion to bureaucratic authority.
           If legal scholarship is characterized as a permanent debate
           without any definitive answers about what people ought to do
           as a matter of law, the first question to be addressed is what
           this means for the legal discipline in terms of what it contrib-
           utes to making progress, and how legal academics can carry
           out creative research. This question is discussed in Section 2,
           followed by a discussion of the question of the methodology
           of legal science and the extent to which the legal discipline has
           its own character in Section 3. This opens up the way for a
           discussion in Section 4 about the academic culture in law and
           how best to organize legal research and teaching.
           2.     INNOVATION IN LEGAL SCIENCE
           50.     The Importance of Creativity
           The prestige of any academic discipline is to a large extent
           determined by innovators and by the degree to which their new
           ideas are appreciated by the community of scholars. Academic
           success is then measured by the passionate propagation of
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             102                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             one’s own ideas and by the extent to which others follow in the
             footsteps of the innovators. This is also the case in legal schol-
             arship: in every episode of its history, we can point to individu-
             als who challenged existing knowledge and were subsequently
             followed by others. Many of the present concepts, rules and
             methods used in the field of law today are the past works of
             creative jurists. This notion of law as a man-made product
             ought to be emphasized more in legal education.
                 I can only refer here to some striking examples in the limited
                 field of private law (and without elaborate reference to sources).
                 There has been an influx of generally adopted legal ‘inventions’
                 (see Hoeren 2001) and it is difficult to imagine the legal field
                 without them. The concept of the ‘legal act’ (Rechtsgeschäft) is
                 a clear example of a legal institution that was invented by Von
                 Savigny in order to facilitate legal thinking (see also supra, no. 8).
                 Notions such as offer, acceptance, and obligation also received
                 their present, well-defined, meaning within a system of private law
                 only as a result of the work of the Pandectists. Even the idea that
                 it is useful to systematize the law at all was (under the influence
                 of Humanism) ‘invented’ in the sixteenth and seventeenth century
                 thanks to innovators such as Donellus, Leibniz, Pufendorf and
                 Wolff. The work of Von Savigny (1814 [1831, 30]) is also impor-
                 tant because he caused a shift in the paradigm: law does not
                 follow from reason, but is developed first ‘by custom and popular
                 faith, next by jurisprudence’. He was equally influential in making
                 explicit the methods of statutory interpretation (grammatical,
                 logical, historical and systematic) that exist (cf. Stein 2000, 13).
                 Another innovation, namely, that the application of law must
                 primarily be tailored to the interests of the actual case, can be
                 derived from Von Jhering. Present-day innovators no longer tend
                 to come from Germany but from the United States: without the
                 pioneering work of Ronald Coase, Guido Calabresi and Richard
                 Posner, the insight that the law can also be viewed from the
                 economic perspective would not have been accepted. Duncan
                 Kennedy’s critical approach towards the law is of equal impor-
                 tance. More recently, Steven Levitt gave a whole new impetus to
                 the empirical approach to law (see supra, no. 16).
                    It is striking (if not disappointing for the state of the legal
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse      103
               discipline) that revolutionary innovators often feel it better not to
               reveal their true names to the legal community. This was true for
               Von Jhering who, in 1861, published his accusations against the
               prevailing Begriffsjurisprudenz anonymously in the form of confi-
               dential letters. In 1906, soon after the introduction of the German
               Civil Code, Kantorowicz waged war against existing legist judi-
               cial practice in The Battle for Legal Science under the pseudonym
               Gnaeus Flavius. Around the turn of the twentieth century in
               South Africa, the battle over the thorny question of whether to
               adopt English law or Roman-Dutch law was also fought under
               fictitious names (see Smits 2002a, 165ff.).
           It is difficult to overestimate the importance of innovative
           research. In particular, the academic work that takes place at
           universities ought to challenge existing knowledge and offer
           new perspectives. Any researcher worth his salt ought to be
           driven primarily by his intellectual curiosity, motivated by
           his desire to discover something new, and to be fearless in the
           face of challenging the establishment. Just like the first wave
           of abstract painters or atonal composers, gifted research-
           ers must strive not simply to imitate their predecessors, but
           to attempt to create something new. To advocate otherwise
           would be the literary equivalent of wishing that such diverse
           authors as De Sade, Robbe-Grillet and Coetzee wrote about
           the same subjects in the same way. Unfortunately, it is not the
           standard view of the layman or first year student that legal
           science offers just as many possibilities for this as astrophysics
           or neuroscience does. On the contrary, the common opinion
           seems to be that getting to know the law and its system should
           go hand in hand with abandoning an inquisitive attitude.
           Studying law often means that one learns about the certain-
           ties of a legal system without asking how things could be done
           differently. This does not match the intellectual challenge that
           legal questions can offer.
               Cf. Posner (1990, 431–432). Also, the Amsterdam professor Ad
               Lagendijk (1997) emphasizes that in physics ‘doing things that are
               against current practice’ will lead to winning Nobel Prizes. In my
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             104                 The mind and method of the legal academic
                 view, a good researcher is therefore contrarian and writes, as was
                 once said about Richard Posner, ‘not to defend, but to be accused’.
                 In Posner’s view, the doctrinal approach no longer meets the
                 requirement of originality: to fit new legislation and judicial deci-
                 sions into a doctrinal system comes, in his view, too close to legal
                 practice and is now ‘work for followers rather than leaders’, if it is
                 not ‘old-fashioned, passé, tired’. In my view, the problem lies not
                 so much in the doctrinal approach itself, which can also be crea-
                 tive, for example when it arranges the existing materials in a given
                 field anew (see also the examples given in no. 8 supra). Rather,
                 this type of research is derivative since it does not pose its own
                 questions but rather prefers to comment on decisions taken by the
                 authoritative institutions. Instead, the researcher should have his
                 own agenda (cf. Rubin 1988, 1883 and Vranken 2006, 115ff.).
             51.     Innovative Research: Many Types
             Although the great importance of creative research has now
             been established, the question of what exactly is creative must
             still be addressed. In my view, research into law can be crea-
             tive in many different ways. It would be wrong to consider one
             type as being better than another. In an important article,
             Mathias Siems recently showed many of the different ways
             legal research can be considered to be original.
                 Siems (2008) provides an exuberant overview of what can be
                 defined as original research in law by categorizing it into four dif-
                 ferent types. First, micro-legal questions analyse a specific legal
                 problem that flows from, for example, a statute, a code or a court
                 decision. They can aim for a new analysis of an existing problem
                 or provide it with an original solution. The originality can thus lie
                 in different things: in finding coherence within the national legal
                 system from which the question arises (such as the ‘discovery’ of
                 the reliance principle in German law by Canaris: see supra, no. 8
                 and Hoeren 2001, 377ff.); or of the principle of proportionality
                 in European law (Van Gerven 1999), but also in showing how a
                 national solution relates to a foreign solution (as in comparative
                 law), or to a previously existing solution (as in legal history), or
                 how it fits a certain philosophical or economic view of law.
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse      105
                  Legal questions can also be original in addressing issues at the
               macro level (Siems 2008, 152): at this level, research is not about a
               specific problem related to a statute or case but is concerned with
               general concepts, problems and principles. Examples include,
               but are not limited to: developing new philosophical foundations
               of law (as in the work of John Rawls and Ronald Dworkin);
               determining what is the province and method of legal science;
               answering the question how European private law may best be
               designed, and whether open-ended or specific norms are better
               for legal development. Writing a new textbook on contract law
               or on the law of criminal procedure in which the law is described
               in a new and coherent way (or in which a lack of coherence is
               demonstrated) is equally original.
                  The two other types of original legal research distinguished
               by Siems (2008, 156ff.) are closer to other academic fields and
               are therefore more often practised by non-lawyers. Empirical
               Law and Economics (dealing with the effects of a legal rule on
               social welfare) is an example of this, as is the previously discussed
               work (no. 16) of Levitt & Donohue (2001) on the influence of the
               legalization of abortion on crime. On the other hand, it is pos-
               sible to research a more general theme, law being only one of the
               factors taken into consideration. This is the case if one explains a
               societal phenomenon, such as the factors contributing to a high
               crime rate in a particular country, where the law is only one of
               the factors being considered alongside other factors including,
               but not limited to, the average level of education, income and
               composition of the population.
                  It must be emphasized here that one type of innovative research
               (such as analysis at the micro level) is not necessarily better
               than another (such as empirical work). Universities and funding
               organizations sometimes tend to refer to certain types of research
               as having more quality than others when pursuing their own
               managerial priorities but this is not entirely accurate or even fair:
               there is nothing against individual law faculties or funding agen-
               cies deliberately choosing to promote a certain type of research,
               but they should not use the argument that only a certain type is of
               sufficient quality. See also infra, no. 61.
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             106                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             52.     Is there Progress in Legal Science?
             The next important question is whether creativity in legal
             scholarship can also lead to progress. In the ‘hard’ disci-
             plines, in which the significance of innovative research is
             invariably emphasized, the standard view of science is that
             the total amount of knowledge increases with new discoveries.
             However, the picture of accumulating knowledge – implying
             that the views of predecessors are rejected and replaced by
             new insights in a sometimes revolutionary way – only seems
             applicable to fields characterized by clear paradigms. Legal
             science – at least in its normative variant – does not have
             such a core of undisputed knowledge (and hence an idea of
             what counts as progress compared to this core). As Thomas
             Kuhn put it: contrary to a ‘normal’ scientist, a student of the
             humanities is confronted with a variety of problems and ‘has
             constantly before him a number of competing and incommen-
             surable solutions to tackle these problems, solutions that he
             must ultimately evaluate for himself’. This makes it difficult, if
             not impossible, to judge if there is any progress in the sense of
             the natural sciences.
                 See Kuhn (1970, 165). The idea of scientific progress (and, as a
                 consequence not only development, but also an improvement
                 of the law) is closely associated with the rational positivism of
                 the seventeenth century (see supra, no. 44), where new and better
                 knowledge can be obtained through empirical testing. However,
                 if empirical testing is impossible (as in legal science), we can no
                 longer speak of progress. Even if it is proclaimed, that particular
                 notion of progress will surely be scrutinized, if not contested. This
                 is also the conclusion Volney Gay (2009) reached when he sur-
                 veyed the question of progress in the humanities. His conclusion
                 is that science and the humanities are fundamentally different,
                 claiming that cultural objects can only be studied within their
                 context and that the only ‘progress’ that can be made consists of
                 giving new meanings to existing information.
                    On the absence of paradigms in the social sciences and humani-
                 ties (and about how progress in hard sciences has taken place by
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse       107
               way of revolutionary paradigm shifts), see Kuhn (1970). Once a
               paradigm (as a universally recognized set of scientific achieve-
               ments that provides model problems and solutions for a commu-
               nity of researchers) has come into existence, all the rest is a matter
               of solving puzzles. This explains why natural science puts so much
               emphasis on formulating substantive research questions that are
               subsequently ‘solved’ within the paradigmatic standard model of,
               for example, physics (since the seventeenth century that model
               has essentially been rational positivism). It follows that the most
               interesting questions deal with the (in the Kuhnian sense) anoma-
               lies that do not fit into the established paradigm. In such cases,
               application of existing methods does not lead to a solution (as
               substantiated by the present debate among physicists over string
               theory). This is an important insight because legal academics
               and representatives of other disciplines sometimes talk at cross-
               purposes when discussing the role of method: see infra, no. 54.
           Better than the term ‘progress’ – implying that out-dated
           insights have definitely been left behind – the neutral term
           ‘evolution’ reflects how development in legal science takes
           place. Changes happen in a process of competition in which
           only the useful arguments (or concepts or rules) survive.
           However, it is essential to normative legal science that legal
           institutions never become fully extinct: an argument, concept
           or rule that was useful in the past can become important again
           in the future, much like the way figurative artists made a come
           back following the first tide of abstract painters.
               The evolutionary approach was explained supra, no. 27. This also
               means that any falsification of legal rules is not possible: if law
               is characterized as the discipline of conflicting arguments (see
               Chapter III above), the validity of these arguments cannot be
               refuted by courts or legislatures. The only possible conclusion is
               that a certain argument fits a given normative setting (such as a
               national jurisdiction) better, where better means that it is more
               strongly conducive to satisfying a goal that is external to the law
               (such as efficiency) or that it has more explanatory power (as the
               term ‘legal act’ may be useful in denoting a number of common
               effects of the different legal phenomena of a contract, a testament
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             108                 The mind and method of the legal academic
                 and the giving of notice). It is important to realize in this regard
                 that Popper never applied the idea of falsification to the law or
                 morals (Wendt 2008, 64); see also Ulen (2002, 9) and Jansen
                 (2005, 772). What is more: falsification is not only impossible in
                 law, it is also unnecessary. Whilst, in the empirical disciplines,
                 only non-falsified hypotheses produce real knowledge, the jurist
                 knows that the legal materials are never silent: one can always
                 find arguments for and against a certain solution.
             The non-cumulative character of legal science has yet another
             consequence. In disciplines that build upon existing know-
             ledge, it is usually not very difficult to identify the questions
             that are still open. A first year student of mathematics or
             astronomy, for example, can immediately list several problems
             that his discipline is wrestling with that, at some point in time,
             could be ‘solved’. Normative legal scholarship is fundamen-
             tally different. First, the law does not have any unsolvable
             questions because the existing materials always allow at least
             some solution. But more importantly, the accuracy of this
             solution can be continuously subjected to debate and scrutiny.
             Innovations in legal science, therefore, are produced through
             the weighing of different arguments from varying perspectives.
                 Mathematics offers an example of an (at least until recently)
                 unsolved problem: the proof of the so-called Poincaré conjecture
                 (formulated in 1904): ‘Anything that looks spherical, is spherical’,
                 or ‘every simply connected, closed 3-manifold is homeomorphic
                 to the 3-sphere’. In 2002, the eccentric Russian mathematician
                 Grisja Perelman proved the conjecture and promptly received
                 the Fields Medal (see infra, no. 60), which he just as promptly
                 declined to accept. Such a discovery is inconceivable in law: at
                 best, an argument that was used in the past prevails under new
                 circumstances or in a changed society. Although these arguments
                 can also come from other disciplines outside the legal field, as was
                 previously noted (see supra, no. 37), how exactly particular non-
                 legal knowledge is important in answering the normative question
                 should always be detailed fully.
                    This does not of course suggest that legal researchers should
                 not explicitly specify how new research relates to what was done
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse     109
                in the past. Legal academics at universities too often reproduce
                only what others did before them. It is important for them to
                make explicit what new insights follow from their research.
           3.     LEGAL SCIENCE AND METHODOLOGY
           53.     Introduction
           Much attention has been paid recently to the research methods
           used by legal academics. This interest is partly caused by
           intellectual curiosity (‘What do we do as legal scholars and,
           in particular, how do we do it?’), but it is partly prompted
           by practical purposes as well. The logic behind the practical
           reasons is as follows: practitioners of other disciplines can,
           more often than not, indicate precisely which method(s) they
           use in doing research, unlike legal academics, who too often
           continue to refrain from doing so at the risk of losing money
           and prestige in the battle among disciplines.
                Increased attention to the methodology of legal science can be
                seen in various countries. See, for Germany, Engel & Schön
                (2007) and Bernhart (2008), for the UK, McCrudden (2006), and
                for the Netherlands, Van Gestel & Vranken (2011, 925ff.) and
                Vranken (2006, 94): ‘What is the subject of the research, and why?
                How does it relate to existing research? (. . .) What are the best
                methods to conduct the research?’ See also Van Hoecke (2011). In
                the United States, Epstein & King (2002, 11) advanced a similar
                plea, though the scope of their conclusion was limited to the situ-
                ation in which jurists do empirical research: ‘The law is important
                enough to have a subfield devoted to methodological concerns,
                as does almost every other discipline that conducts empirical
                research.’ Cf. Rhode (2002).
                   Particularly in the eyes of other disciplines’ representatives,
                legal academics often make use of an unclear methodology. This
                becomes apparent in assessing research proposals by funding
                organizations such as the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
                (DFG), the UK’s Economic and Social Research Council
                (ESRC) and Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC),
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             110                 The mind and method of the legal academic
                 and the Dutch Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk
                 Onderzoek (NWO). All these funding organizations (like also the
                 Directorate for Social, Behavioural & Economic Sciences (SBE)
                 of the US National Science Foundation) increasingly assess pro-
                 posals for research grants in interdisciplinary panels that consist
                 not only of jurists, but also of economists, psychologists and
                 other academics. In the Dutch situation, the assessment is indeed
                 taking place at an increasingly high level. Before 1995, law had
                 its own panel within the division of the social sciences but, since
                 then, the barriers that separated the academic fields into various
                 divisions have been levelled. The aim was explicitly to unify the
                 assessment procedure, to refrain from adhering to mechanisms
                 that protected certain fields, and to stimulate interdisciplinary
                 work. The result is that jurists now have to compete with not
                 only economists and psychologists, but also with sociologists,
                 anthropologists and colleagues working in political science and
                 management studies. Although there are clear advantages to
                 breaking down these disciplinary walls, the problem persists that
                 lawyers have a hard time convincing colleagues in other fields of
                 the soundness of their methodology.
             The first question addressed in this section is whether the use
             of clear research methods can have the same effect in law that
             it has in the empirical disciplines and, if not, what alternatives
             exist (no. 54). Subsequently, a plea is made for a better justifi-
             cation of choices made in legal research (no. 55), but also for
             putting into perspective the importance of an explicit research
             question (no. 56), as well as for a methodological pluralism,
             which states that one method is not, in and of itself, better
             than another (no. 57). The development that disciplines such
             as economics and psychology have endured will illustrate why
             any other view regarding this matter is a mere delusion.
             54.     Research Methods and Law
             If a method is a way to achieve a predetermined goal, then a
             research method is a way to provide rules on how to conduct
             research: it indicates how knowledge is to be acquired in order
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse        111
           to answer a question. This implies that a research method
           presupposes two things: there must be a question that deserves
           to be answered; and the answer to this question will only be
           viewed as reliable if a particular method has been followed. To
           ‘coincidentally’ find the right answer does not suffice: the steps
           taken to reach the result must be verifiable to others. If this
           requirement of a verifiable method is taken seriously in legal
           scholarship, it means that only knowledge obtained through
           this method can be recognized as viable.
               A method in the sense of generally accepted rules to achieve
               academic knowledge about the law must be distinguished from
               several other legal ‘methods’. Thus, a method of ‘legal thinking’ is
               often mentioned (see Mastronardi 2001, Schauer 2009 and supra,
               no. 28), or similarly methods of finding the law (Rechtsfindung:
               the heuristics of legal reasoning) or of legitimating a decision. If
               (as is claimed in a still influential view) the activities of the legal
               scholar do not fundamentally differ from those of the judge,
               these methods of finding and legitimating the law are also to be
               seen as scholarly methods (thus e.g. Larenz 1991, 6ff.). Finally,
               there are the more practical methods (‘skills’), such as how to
               find legislation, case law and literature and how to argue, cite
               sources and interpret legislative texts (on which, for example, in
               Germany Tettinger & Mann 2009, in France Bonnet 2006 and in
               the Netherlands IJzermans & Van Schaaijk 2007).
           How far is legal scholarship also subject to this methodologi-
           cal requirement? This question can be justified because the idea
           that knowledge acquired by using a scientific method is more
           reliable than knowledge that is not, stems from the empirical
           disciplines. In the empirical disciplines, it is usually assumed
           that the results of a research must be verifiable and even rep-
           licable in order to disprove any notion that observation of the
           facts could lead to falsification or data tampering. There is
           even more reason to ask whether the legal discipline ought to
           be subject to a strict methodology in view of the fact that strict
           methodological requirements do not usually have to be met in
           the humanities and are, at least, disputed in the social sciences.
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             112                 The mind and method of the legal academic
                 For Popper (2002) the qualification of an academic field as science
                 is dependent on whether the method of falsification can lead to
                 collecting knowledge. The use of this particular method is thus
                 a criterion of demarcation: it allows us to distinguish between
                 scientific (usually empirical) and other knowledge. This does not
                 mean that in Popper’s view, knowledge cannot be obtained in
                 any other way, only that it is then not found by way of falsifica-
                 tion. In several continental European countries, including the
                 Netherlands, this view became influential outside the natural
                 sciences through the work of Adriaan de Groot, whose book
                 on the methodology of behavioural sciences in 1969 influenced
                 generations of psychologists, sociologists, and others. De Groot
                 emphasizes the importance of a rational scientific model in which
                 the researcher must always formulate his views by way of testable
                 hypotheses. He must subsequently test these in what he calls the
                 ‘empirical cycle’: a research starts with the observation of empiri-
                 cal facts and a formulation of hypotheses, followed by empirical
                 testing and evaluation of their theoretical validity. See on the
                 methodology of the non-empirical disciplines also John & McIver
                 Lopes (2004) and Leezenberg & De Vries (2001, 83).
             In my view, the function of a method in normative legal schol-
             arship cannot be the same as in the empirical disciplines. The
             latter use a method to ban all uncertainty: precisely because
             a certain method was followed, there can no longer be any
             doubt about the accuracy of the outcome. Anyone else fol-
             lowing the same method will have to reach the same result.
             This is fundamentally different in normative legal scholarship:
             the use of any method will not banish doubt, instead – as was
             elaborately argued in Chapter III – it will lead to a new discus-
             sion. Put differently, the use of a particular method will not
             make the answer to normative questions more ‘academic’ and
             knowledge that is acquired by way of a certain method is not
             for this reason less disputed.
                This does not mean that it is impossible to acquire objec-
             tive or reliable knowledge in the legal discipline. It means,
             however, that knowledge is acquired in another way that is
             not strictly prescribed by research methods: the legal discipline
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse       113
           is primarily a practice, in which the community of academic
           colleagues (the forum) decides on what is to be seen as reliable
           knowledge.
               Knowledge can come about either because it was reached through
               some defined method, or because it is recognized in academic
               practice (cf. infra, no. 21). Together with many of the humanities
               and social sciences, normative legal scholarship can be seen as
               such a practice. Knowledge that is obtained within these fields
               is not inferior to empirical knowledge – it is only a different
               type of knowledge. This point is also made by Joseph William
               Singer (2009) when he tells us that normative argument need not
               be airtight to make it valuable. The prominent German author
               Karl Larenz (1991, 6–7) similarly shows that the objectivity of
               legal scholarship lies in its ability ‘to further develop the existing
               value judgments, to make these explicit, and to relate any new
               value judgments that have to be made within certain limits to the
               existing ones’. The constraint here is that one cannot achieve the
               ‘degree of certainty and preciseness as in mathematics or as in
               performing a physical experiment’.
                   The community of scholars deciding what is to be seen as objec-
               tive knowledge (so-called ‘disciplinary objectivity’) is one of the
               ‘cultures of objectivity’ distinguished by Porter (1995, 3 ff.). This
               idea of a forum means that any insights must be part of a continu-
               ous discussion: even though the ‘truth’ of an insight cannot be
               established and there is, at best, consensus among academics that
               it is the right one – in much the same way as with the paradigms of
               Thomas Kuhn. The consensus must of course exist as to a certain
               view being defensible, but not that it is the only possible view. For
               example, Backhouse (1997, 41) considers an idea to be decisive
               if it was first proposed in an article, was subsequently discussed
               by others and is eventually mentioned in a textbook. This makes
               any academic discipline a ‘self-correcting’ process (Leezenberg &
               De Vries 2001, 17). See also Patterson (2001), emphasizing that
               what is considered objective and marked as reliable is completely
               dependent on the field in question.
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             114                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             55.     Making Choices Explicit
             In the previous section, reservations were expressed about the
             importance of clearly defined methods in doing normative
             legal research. This is not to suggest that it is useless for legal
             researchers to state the exact topic of their research explicitly
             (the ‘research question’), why it takes place (the ‘aim’) and
             how the researcher approaches the theme (the ‘method’). This
             follows from the need in any academic field to present research
             in a transparent and fair way, thus adding to the reliability and
             quality of the research results: in any writing about the law,
             choices are made and in so far as these are not self-evident to
             the academic community, making these choices explicit will
             help the researcher and its audience in making clear what the
             research is about.
                 Discussion about the methodology of legal research is often
                 framed as a matter of quality: more attention to formulating
                 a precise research question and an accompanying method to
                 answer it, would lead to better research. However, as evidenced
                 infra, no. 54, methodology is here characterized unjustifiably as
                 having the same role that it has in the empirical sciences where
                 methodology has the potential to distinguish between reliable
                 and unreliable knowledge. Apart from that, this view suffers from
                 the same problem of which methodologists have often accused
                 legal scholars: a lack of empirical basis. It is difficult to establish
                 empirically that research not based on a clear methodological
                 foundation is of less quality than research based on a sound
                 methodology. It seems, in any event, that today’s legal academic
                 community does not judge the quality of academic work in terms
                 of the use of a clear research method, but places much more
                 emphasis on peer review, favourable book reviews or the reputa-
                 tion of the author. See, for a similar view, the reactions to Epstein
                 & King (2002) in the special issue of the University of Chicago
                 Law Review 2002, no. 1.
             Legal research is insufficiently explicit particularly when it
             comes to the discussion of how to evaluate a judicial decision
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse        115
           or a piece of legislation. This assessment is often not based on
           the legal system itself (where the most important criterion is
           the way in which one element connects to the other elements
           of the system), but on some legal criterion that is difficult to
           measure (‘the legal certainty’, ‘social justice’, and so on) or
           even on a criterion that is based outside the law (‘the interests
           of business parties’, ‘what works?’). It is then necessary to
           make explicit what this criterion precisely requires.
               Similar views are expressed by Posner (2000, 69), Vranken (2006,
               94 ff.) and Tijssen (2009, 75). The latter mentions, in this context,
               the importance of a framework of assessment. One could also
               wish that legal scholars were more careful when making state-
               ments about the effects of changes in the law, such as: the alleged
               drop in crime as a result of abortion legalization (see infra, no. 16);
               the increase in false confessions through the use of certain inter-
               rogation techniques; or about delays in civil procedure caused by
               changes in procedural law.
                  Epstein & King (2002, 38) are particularly critical of this type
               of ‘empirical’ research by academic lawyers. Their most impor-
               tant criticism is that the requirement of replicability is almost
               never met: ‘Another researcher should be able to understand,
               evaluate, build on, and reproduce the research without any
               additional information from the author (. . .). Unfortunately, the
               present state of legal scholarship nearly always fails this most
               basic of tests.’ To Epstein and King (who are both political
               scientists) the individuality of the researcher is completely irrel-
               evant: ‘sentences that begin “I think” or “I believe” are beside
               the point’ (p. 45). However, in the empirical-normative approach
               advocated above (no. 39), the confrontation with empirical data
               can take place in a much more liberal way. These data are not
               used to discover the truth but are arguments that have already
               been tested in the practice of an existing jurisdiction. See also
               Shapin (2008, 6) on the idea of the ‘invisible scientist’ as argued
               by Epstein & King.
           Traditional doctrinal research can also benefit from a better
           clarification of the questions it seeks to answer. The goal of
           this type of research is usually to mould new legislation and
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             116                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             judicial decisions in the legal system, or to create a whole new
             system by categorizing the existing materials in a different
             way. However, these seemingly routine activities also require
             many choices to be made, such as over which materials are to
             be used (only those produced by the national authorities, or
             also European and foreign legislation and case law, or even
             private regulation), and how these are to be systematized.
                 This is because systematization is possible in different ways, as
                 exemplified by the various approaches of Von Savigny (1840–1848
                 [1979]), Larenz (1991, 474ff.), Canaris (1983) and MacCormick
                 (1978). In addition, the question of how to determine internal
                 consistency within the legal system deserves some explication in
                 this type of work.
                    It is important to emphasize that the goal of the research need
                 not lie in solving a societal problem or in better understanding
                 society. The consequence of this would be that law could only be
                 studied as an instrument and not as an autonomous system (as
                 is indeed suggested by Epstein & King 2002, 60). Tijssen (2009,
                 74ff.) rightly states that the framework of assessment can also
                 consist of the legal system itself, such as when new materials are
                 fitted into this system.
             56.     A Need for an Explicit Research Question?
             Of course, the aforementioned conclusion does not suggest
             that a ‘research problem’ always needs to be rigidly desig-
             nated, nor does it mean that it must follow an equally rigid
             description of its methods. As is also the case with good
             research in the humanities and social sciences, legal research
             often has rhetorical power: if the ‘creative jurist’ believes that
             his research cannot be presented after the model of the empiri-
             cal disciplines, this is completely legitimate.
                The most important reason why an explicit formulation of a
             problem should not be overvalued lies in the fact that the non-
             empirical disciplines do not test hypotheses. The humanities
             and the law are more often concerned with – in the wording
             of Ferdinand Feldbrugge – ‘the investigation of a broader
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse     117
           field, where, at least initially, no specific questions are asked,
           but a wider range of phenomena is observed and described.
           This procedure may then yield various alternative avenues
           for further research (. . .). The researcher is like a nineteenth
           century explorer who enters an area which is still blank on the
           available maps. He does not really know what he is looking
           for.’
               See Feldbrugge (2003, vii). He explains how, when he started
               working on his book, The Law’s Beginnings, a clear-cut theme
               was missing. Initially, his interest was in doing ‘something’ with
               ‘early law’, dealing with issues such as: ‘What happens during
               the phase of legal development in which law divests itself of its
               close relationship with other aspects of social life?’ ‘What are the
               conditions under which the law ‘begins’ to exist?’ ‘Are there paral-
               lels between archaic jurisdictions in India, Greece, Italy, Ireland,
               Friesland, Russia and Mesopotamia?’ In other words, the exact
               question of the research only became clear after the research was
               done.
                  The research that is seen as important by the academic com-
               munity often follows the road laid out by Feldbrugge. Thus,
               such diverse works as John Rawls’ A Theory of Justice (1999),
               Johannes Köndgen’s Selbstbindung ohne Vertrag (1981) and
               Reinhard Zimmermann’s The Law of Obligations (1990) do not
               have a clear research question. Ronald Coase’s The Problem of
               Social Cost (1960), one of the most influential works in the field
               of Law and Economics, also does not pose a clear question: it
               merely describes at the outset what the article is about in the way
               promoted by Feldbrugge.
           This does not mean that once the research is finalized, a
           research question can no longer be formulated. It does mean,
           however, that this can only be a justification afterwards of
           what the creative researcher – by reading, writing, reflect-
           ing and discussing – did, in fact. The research question, the
           sources to be used and the research theme form a trinity
           and, together, they are in constant development during the
           research. Of course, formulating a research question can be a
           useful tool, forcing the researcher to a first demarcation of the
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             118                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             research theme. In many cases, putting the argument in the
             form of a question that is then subsequently answered can also
             have rhetorical power. But this is not the recipe for creative or
             high-quality research.
                 Leezenberg & De Vries (2001, 66) point out that the scheme of
                 research question and method is only a ‘reconstruction’ of the
                 research process by rational positivists and is unjustifiably seen as
                 a recipe for the design of good research. This overlooks the fact
                 that such schemes only deal with the justification of knowledge
                 and not with its acquisition: requirements in the context of justi-
                 fication are not to be confused with requirements in the context
                 of discovery. Put differently, if one is able to formulate a research
                 question in the way prescribed by methodologists, it is likely
                 that one already knows the answer. Carrying out research in this
                 way may not give much pleasure; see for other objections also
                 Backhouse (1997, 8ff.). The experience of any good researcher is
                 that creative research (on the importance of which supra, no. 50)
                 is often dictated by coincidental ‘discoveries’, done in libraries
                 (and often not by looking into the books and journals that are
                 directly related to the theme), on the internet, or flowing from
                 discussions with colleagues (also from other disciplines) or stu-
                 dents. The importance of browsing also condemns the complete
                 replacement of ‘paper’ law journals to its electronic counterpart
                 (cf. infra, no. 59).
                    Important discoveries in natural science often do not rise
                 out of previously formulated hypotheses. This is certainly true
                 for paradigm shifts (Kuhn 1970; Newton did not build upon
                 Aristotle’s Physics), but also for less revolutionary finds. Much
                 more often, something is ‘observed’ by a trained academic
                 who does not know precisely what he is looking for, but who
                 – thanks to his ‘practical wisdom’ – sees how progress can be
                 made. Leeuwenhoek did not discover the microscope because
                 he was looking for it, and Gregory House MD does not make
                 the right diagnosis because he follows some medical protocol.
                 The good researcher must have space for what is sometimes
                 called ‘informed messing around’ or ‘unguided play’: he must
                 be allowed the freedom to fiddle around and see in the same
                 materials what somebody else did not see.
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse      119
           57.     Methodological Pluralism
           Having read the considerations above, it will not come as
           a surprise that legal science can make use of many different
           methods and that one method is not necessarily better than the
           other. Which method must be used is completely dependent
           on the aim of the research. If one aims to fit existing materials
           into the legal system, one would have to make use of another
           method than if one intended to build up a new system. And
           someone interested in interpreting a judicial decision will
           go about answering this question in a different way from
           someone who wants to investigate the effects of the decision
           on the behaviour of individuals.
               As indicated above (no. 55), it is fair for a critic or a reader of
               academic work to expect a full disclosure of the method used.
               This is a matter of transparency and, for similar reasons, a legal
               academic should not only state the arguments in favour of his
               position but also the arguments against it. In addition to this, the
               legal academic should be independent (that is, he does not have
               a professional, financial or private interest in arguing in a certain
               way) and be accurate in referring to his sources.
           How important it is to preserve this pluralism of methods –
           hence not to completely trade in the legal methods for those of
           other disciplines – is proven by the development that econom-
           ics and psychology have gone through in the last half-century.
           Both fields (or at least those parts that are seen as the most
           prestigious) now rely heavily on empirical and mathematical
           methods.
               In the last fifty years, there has been a keen methodological battle
               in both disciplines. This led to a much debated victory of the
               mathematical method in economics (cf. Debreu 1991) and to an
               emphasis on cognitive models in psychology. What Nobel Prize
               winner, George Stigler, noted back in 1963 (1ff.) with regard to
               the dominance of the mathematical method in economics is rep-
               resentative of how many economists see this development: ‘The
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             120                 The mind and method of the legal academic
                 age of quantification is now full upon us. We are now armed with
                 a bulging arsenal of techniques of quantitative analysis, and of a
                 power – as compared to untrained common sense – comparable
                 to the displacement of archery by cannon. (. . .) It is a scientific
                 revolution of the first magnitude (. . .) I am convinced that eco-
                 nomics is finally at the threshold of its golden age (. . .).’ See on
                 this Backhouse (1997) and Morgan (2003).
                    The field of psychology has, in the last 50 years, also turned
                 from a theoretical discipline into an empirical one, with a
                 stronger association with the natural sciences. The well-known
                 Dutch psychologist Hans Crombag (2006) illustrates how the
                 study of psychology dealt with the psyche until well into the
                 1960s and was more about studying emotions than about hard
                 facts. A human’s personality was supposed to consist of several
                 layers of depth (the Schichtentheorie or strata theory), including
                 the Lebensgrund (existence-related drives), endothymer Grund
                 (endothymic ground) and personeller Oberbau. The aim was to
                 find the location of emotions in each of these layers, a type of
                 research that took place by having people fill in questionnaires.
                 The revolution came with the behaviourism of B.F. Skinner: the
                 only thing to be trusted is the observable and anything that people
                 say about their motives must be distrusted.
                    Both in economics and in psychology this shift led to a situation
                 in which the object of study is more and more limited to things
                 that can be modelled (as in economics) or for which empirical
                 proof can be provided (as in psychology). Research that did not
                 make use of these methods became less prestigious in the view of
                 the majority. See Ash (2003, 260) and Porter (1995, 17): ‘Among
                 psychologists, it is the weaker students who specialize in the more
                 humane branches: those with lower seconds (. . .).’
             I mention the examples of economics and psychology because
             it would be a rather unattractive prospect if legal science were
             to develop in the same direction. Legal scholarship should
             vehemently avoid emulating the methods of these other disci-
             plines. Following in their footsteps can only lead to a situation
             in which the battle with the other disciplines is lost. Instead,
             the legal discipline should focus on its strengths. This is where
             the empirical sciences are weak, namely in reflecting on what
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse     121
           people should do as a matter of law in our society and in offer-
           ing a method to determine this. Clifford Geertz generalizes this
           point in the following way: ‘The quests for general, abstract,
           situationally unconditioned theory, for precise predictability,
           and for universally applicable, “objectivist” method are mis-
           placed in research designed to discover why it is that human
           beings think, feel, and act as they do. To discover how we
           learn, how we relate to one another, how we understand what
           happens to us, demands something more, or something other,
           than the size-up-and-solve mentality of the soi-disant “hard
           sciences”.’
               Geertz (2001). See also Porter (1995, 5): quantification ‘simply
               evades the deep and important issues’ and makes the discipline
               poorer than it was before. The plea of Bent Flyvbjerg for a turn
               in the social sciences is repeated here for the legal discipline.
               Flyvbjerg (2001) emphasizes that scientists will most certainly lose
               the debate about the importance of their discipline if they are led
               by the model of the natural sciences. They should underline instead
               what is their unique contribution to knowledge about humans;
               see also supra, no. 44. This is also an important public debate: in
               the German Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung of 14 June 2009, 83
               professors of economics published a cry of distress that univer-
               sity chairs for economics are increasingly occupied by econom-
               etricians and mathematical economists without much interest in
               questions of policy relevant to the German or European economy.
               In response, 188 other university academics riposted and claimed
               that the first group apparently wanted to embark upon a German
               Sonderweg in the very international discipline of economics, and
               sacrifice academic excellence for policy-oriented work.
                  Deirdre McKloskey (1983) points out that, although econo-
               mists formally pay lip service to the use of hard methods, they
               do in the end make use of more traditional argumentative tech-
               niques. The knowledge that is obtained from the more prestig-
               ious methods does not suffice to answer many of the relevant
               questions.
           It may be important to emphasize that I am also a proponent
           of using empirical methods in legal scholarship to a greater
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             122                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             extent than is the case at present: this will lead to stimulating
             and creative research. However, this type of work is particu-
             larly useful when trying to answer a certain type of questions
             within the legal discipline. I argue strongly against the notion
             that knowledge acquired by making use of empirical methods
             is more trustworthy, or simply better, than insights provided
             by more traditional methods of research.
                  It is problematic that some academics – in particular those prac-
                  tising the empirical sciences – regard only one method (that is to
                  say their own) as a universal panacea. Thus, the famous American
                  biologist, Edward O. Wilson (1998), claims that the existing rift
                  between the natural sciences, on the one hand, and the humanities
                  and social sciences, on the other, must be bridged sooner rather
                  than later. However, in the synthesis he proposes, the methods
                  of the natural sciences (directed towards physical perception) are
                  dominant. See, for criticism of Wilson’s reductionist view of the
                  unity of knowledge, Stephen Jay Gould (2003). It is surprising
                  to find that, more than 250 years after Hume’s statement (1748
                  [1975, 165]) about knowledge – ‘Does it contain any abstract rea-
                  soning concerning quantity or number? No. Does it contain any
                  experimental reasoning concerning matter of fact and existence?
                  No. Commit it then to the flames: for it can contain nothing but
                  sophistry and illusion’ – this reductionism is still so influential. It
                  seems safe to conclude that pushing the idea of empirical methods
                  as offering the only ‘real’ knowledge has proven to be a highly
                  successful strategy in the fight for money and prestige. This can
                  also explain why natural scientists are usually over-represented
                  in awarding prestigious national research prizes (such as the
                  German Leibniz Prize and the Dutch Spinoza Prize).
             4.     THE RESEARCH CULTURE IN LEGAL
                    ACADEMIA
             58.     Introduction
             This section examines the research culture in legal academia,
             which is a topic that is just as important for a fertile legal
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse    123
           discourse as the requirements that research must be innova-
           tive (Section 2) and explicit about its aim and methodology
           (Section 3). The concern here is to organize research (and
           teaching) in such a way that it is conducive to the needs of
           the academic community. This concern determines which
           perspective is adopted: it is not how to make research as
           ‘manageable’ and controllable as possible for policymakers,
           but how to design the university in such a way that it satis-
           fies the needs of academics themselves. To this end, attention
           is successively paid in this section to research programmes
           (no. 59), to the importance of fundamental research, and to
           the question whether today’s market-driven forces curtail
           these aims (no. 60). This is followed by a sketch of an alterna-
           tive approach or at least its contours (no. 61). The final section
           is devoted to legal education (no. 62).
               Some readers will possibly consider what follows as striving for
               a hopelessly old-fashioned and romantic ideal of research and
               teaching. Perhaps forty years ago, it would have even been con-
               sidered a cliché. However, I am of the opinion that it would be
               good to re-establish a number of the old ideals in doing academic
               work – although not as old as it might seem, namely developed
               in the beginning of the nineteenth century by Alexander Von
               Humboldt. This is certainly not a plea for a return to past times,
               but it is a call for a re-evaluation of some essential university
               values that have come dangerously close to being overlooked,
               much to the peril of the universities themselves. I am not alone in
               expressing this concern: see, in general, Brown (2011) and, more
               specifically, Dilger (2011) for Germany, Van Oostrom (2007) and
               Lorenz (2008) for the Netherlands, and Bok (2004) for the United
               States.
           59.     Research Programmes
           Law was defined in Chapter III as the discipline of conflicting
           arguments about what ought to be. This view not only leads
           to the substantive consequences for the character of law that
           have already been described, but it also means something for
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             124                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             the way in which universities should organize their research.
             The argumentative character of legal science makes it able to
             profit from debate. Moreover, the emphasis on the importance
             of creativity (see supra, no. 50) means that university policy
             makers have to stimulate this to the greatest extent possi-
             ble. Finally, an important task of universities is to train new
             researchers. In my view, debate, creativity and training are
             best stimulated by organizing research in the form of research
             groups that carry out a joint ‘research programme’. Each of
             these aspects is discussed below.
                 Research can be organized in different ways. The standard
                 method in many fields throughout the world is to establish coher-
                 ent sets of research activities having a common mission and
                 tasking groups of people who generally work together on a daily
                 basis to carry out these activities. The phenomenon comes from
                 natural sciences, where group work became necessary for finan-
                 cial and practical reasons, and it was no longer possible to carry
                 out experiments on an individual basis. This was (and still is) par-
                 ticularly true where expensive infrastructure is needed, as exem-
                 plified by the European ‘Very Large Telescope’ (VLT) in Chile or
                 the Large Hadron Collider of CERN in Geneva, involving 7000
                 researchers from 80 countries.
                    Organizing legal research by way of programmes has also
                 become the standard in various European countries. Thus, in
                 the Netherlands, almost all research carried out at universities
                 is categorized under programmes at the level of departments,
                 institutes, faculties or (often inter-faculty) research schools. In
                 the last national research assessment in 2009, 59 different pro-
                 grammes in law were evaluated. And even though many of these
                 programmes were originally set up as a result of external pressure
                 (research programming in the Netherlands is often seen as neces-
                 sary to obtain funding), there are good substantive reasons why
                 like-minded researchers should work together.
             The first advantage of working within a research group is that
             it stimulates academic discussion. Necessary components to
             fostering a good research culture are an environment where
             people can freely express ideas, are contradicted by others, are
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse    125
           inspired by their colleagues’ work and can thus enhance the
           quality of their own work by way of debate. The American
           sociologist Robert K. Merton spoke of this as a ‘serendipi-
           tous microenvironment’. The creation of such a stimulating
           research culture is an essential responsibility of any university.
               See Merton & Barber (2006, 262). Legal science traditionally has
               an individualist research tradition, but this has taken a turn for
               the better in the last decade or so. The idea that the quality of
               research is improved if it is done within ‘a community of gifted
               people working intimately but independently, with each free to
               follow his own mind’ (thus, James B. Fisk, former President of
               Bell Labs: Shapin 2008, 190) is by now widely accepted: schol-
               ars are expected to draw out objections to their drafts and to
               comment themselves on the drafts of colleagues. This form of
               informal peer review is perhaps the most important form of
               quality control one can think of.
                  The inspiration one can draw from the group is of course
               strongly dependent on its design. As the Dutch physicist, Ad
               Lagendijk (1997) has written: ‘A professor, a single postdoc
               and a few PhD-researchers that I see on a daily basis (.  .  .).
               Terrific research can thrive in a small group apart from the rest.’
               Interdisciplinary research can be promoted by encouraging repre-
               sentatives of different disciplines to work together in one group.
               This is by no means an easy task and the results may lead only
               to multi-disciplinary insights, meaning that a given problem is
               approached from different angles without any further integra-
               tion. Another worthwhile issue for drawing inspiration is the
               location of meetings. The participants in these groups will surely
               require access to books and journals, preferably located in open
               stacks. Having a central location in a common room, where
               there is a constant stream of visitors could be beneficial to the
               group as well (cf. infra, no. 56). The Leiden-based Lorentz Centre
               (for astronomy, mathematics and physics) is in this respect an
               inspiring example.
           Secondly, it must be emphasized that the wider framework
           of a research group can offer a fertile breeding ground for
           individual creativity. This may be doubted by those who
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             126                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             see research programmes only as an obstacle to good legal
             research because they believe that real advances are always
             made by individuals. However, any good research group does
             not curtail creativity, but stimulates it. This objection drills
             us in what must be the purpose of research programming: to
             facilitate an individual researcher’s quest for understanding a
             theme he is fascinated by, and not a straitjacket allowing only
             a certain type of work.
                 Ipsen (2005, 427), for example, is critical of research program-
                 ming and of cooperation among researchers: ‘Wesentliche
                 Fortschritte im rechtswissenschaftlichen Diskurs werden (.  .  .)
                 durch Monographien erzielt.’ (‘Real progress in legal discourse
                 is made through monographs.’) I largely agree but do not see
                 a contradiction here: cooperation should not stand in the way
                 of individual fervour. However, it is safe to say that individual
                 researchers will remain the driving force in pushing legal science
                 forward.
                    To be fair, in addressing this criticism of research programmes,
                 I will concede, based on my own experiences, that programming
                 sometimes can be restrictive. This is primarily caused by the inter-
                 est of the research director or programme leader in presenting
                 a coherent output to assessment committees – thus stimulating
                 colleagues to publish as much as possible within the narrow
                 boundaries of the programme. This is why, in my view, assess-
                 ment committees should attach less importance to the programme
                 description (the ‘plans’) and more to the realized publications,
                 which should of course still give evidence of some coherence.
                 This argues for brief programme descriptions indicating the field
                 of research, the methods to be used and the type of publication
                 aimed at, without curtailing individual creativity.
                    An alternative, is not to assess research programmes by them-
                 selves, but to assess the output of the faculty as a whole, based
                 on the individual publications of its members. The often-heard
                 objection that this would be logistically impossible is belied
                 by the experience in the United Kingdom, where the Research
                 Assessment Exercise has been organized in this way since 1992
                 (cf. <www.rae.ac.uk>). This does more justice to the reality that
                 the quality of legal research is ultimately dependent on individual
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse     127
               achievements. To assume that assessing a programme would say
               anything about the quality of its individual members presupposes
               a different type of exercise of scholarly activities than is usually
               the case in legal science. At American law schools research pro-
               grammes are almost entirely absent.
           Thirdly, a research group offers the ideal environment for
           young (PhD) researchers, where they are trained and looked
           after by their senior colleagues and can share their experiences
           with other young colleagues.
               Several European countries have in the last decade set up ‘gradu-
               ate schools’ for their PhD researchers (unlike the American
               model, these schools do not include master students). Graduate
               schools (either at the university or faculty level) usually offer
               courses and carry formal responsibility for the well-being of the
               doctoral students. They potentially have the big advantage that
               they can fight parochialism by bringing together researchers
               from different fields. In the Netherlands, several law faculties
               have chosen a different model: they work together in so-called
               ‘research schools’, sometimes even having common research
               programmes of three or four different law faculties. In particular
               the Ius Commune Research School (<www.iuscommune.eu>),
               which was founded in 1995, has proved to be successful: it unites
               a large part of the PhD researchers and senior staff members in
               the Netherlands who work in the fields of European private law,
               European constitutional law, and comparative law. However,
               more important than these large networks, is the micro-climate of
               the direct working environment (see above).
           60.     The Market and the Importance of Fundamental Research
           Yet another essential aspect of the research culture in legal
           academia is that the culture is supposed to stimulate creative
           and fundamental research. The responsibility of the univer-
           sity does not primarily lie with offering services to society
           or with doing research that is of immediate relevance to the
           general public, but with a search for fundamental knowl-
           edge. Although this Humboldtian ideal is widely accepted by
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             128                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             universities and funding organizations throughout the world,
             it is under threat – as it has always been.
                 The primary motivation of any academic researcher must be
                 his personal passion for doing scholarly work. This means that
                 the university should cherish the individuality and headstrong
                 character of the good researcher: innovation always comes from
                 the margins and what counts in the end is the academic output.
                 Gifted academics must therefore be able to pursue their own
                 research agenda. This is also the case because it is difficult to
                 say in advance what is the best thing to do to make progress (cf.
                 Vranken 2006, 30).
                    It is therefore highly positive that funding organizations increas-
                 ingly grant money on the basis of individual merit. This can be
                 seen in the personal prizes created by national funding organiza-
                 tions (such as the German Leibniz Prize and the Dutch Spinoza
                 Prize as well as Innovational Research Incentives Schemes), but
                 also in the Starting grants and Advanced grants established by the
                 European Research Council in 2007. However, it takes more than
                 this to foster a research culture with a focus on stimulating crea-
                 tivity. Here, one can make great progress by taking small steps.
                 Thus, the culture of (international) academic prizes for legal
                 research is relatively undeveloped. Mathematics and economics
                 each have their own prize for the best researcher under forty,
                 namely the Fields Medal (awarded since 1936) and the John Bates
                 Clark Medal (established in 1947). These examples are worth fol-
                 lowing. Individual law faculties can also create prize contests for
                 advanced students (which also happens to be an excellent way to
                 recruit PhD-researchers). This is in line with the largely accepted
                 insight that these types of symbolic rewards are better at enhanc-
                 ing intrinsic motivation than financial incentives (cf. Osterloh &
                 Frey 2010 and infra).
             The biggest threat to fundamental and creative research is
             the strong increase in market efficiency at universities. This
             phenomenon can be observed in many countries. At its core,
             is the creation of an atmosphere of distrust towards academ-
             ics, and a belief in control and accountability to guarantee a
             higher quality of research. This is why a group of prestigious
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse   129
           European universities recently sounded the tocsin about this
           development and made a plea for valuing precisely those ele-
           ments of academic research that are not manageable, such as
           creativity and serendipity. Their warning is against the fallacy
           of management in removing things if they cannot be managed
           or they make management more difficult.
               This call (Boulton & Lucas 2008) was made by the League
               of European Research Universities (LERU) that includes, for
               example, the universities of Oxford, Cambridge, Munich, Helsinki
               and Leiden. Their challenge to market-driven targets that turn
               universities into providers of valorized knowledge and jeopard-
               ize their fundamental mission is mirrored in the pleas made by
               prominent academics, including the former President of Harvard
               University, Derek Bok (2004), and the former President of the
               Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, Frits van
               Oostrom (2006). They both warn of a climate in which to ‘score’
               in the short term is sometimes seen as being more important than
               to do fundamental and curiosity-driven research. Van Oostrom
               describes how departments increasingly function as counters for
               all kinds of subsidies caused by the lack of backbone in academics
               and their administrators. The theme is further explored by Pels
               (2003), Lorenz (2008) – under the illuminating title, If you’re So
               Smart, Why aren’t you Rich? – and Regini (2011).
           The basis for reducing universities to organizations driven by
           market efficiency originated in the principles of the new public
           management, particularly based on the idea that competi-
           tion among individuals or research groups will lead to higher
           quality outputs. The underlying premise in this model is that
           quality can be measured by way of so-called ‘performance
           indicators’. The positive thing about this is that the empha-
           sis lies on the performance: no matter what the previously
           formulated plans were or how much time was invested, the
           quality of academic publications is all that matters in the
           end. In this regard, market thinking is a proper form of de-
           bureaucratization and can offer an incentive to perform well.
           However, this overlooks the perverse effects of performance
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             130                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             measurement. There are, in particular, two such effects that
             make the application of market efficiency to fundamental and
             creative academic research (and education) problematic.
                 There is an abundance of literature on the new public manage-
                 ment (the application of management techniques developed for
                 business to the public sector). Although performance measure-
                 ment furthers transparency, efficiency, and accountability, its
                 disadvantages are also widely recognized: in addition to the two
                 drawbacks discussed below, it is well known that they are likely
                 to advance strategic behaviour (those being measured learn how
                 to manipulate the indicators), do not stimulate innovation (repro-
                 duction of previous work will often lead to a higher score) and can
                 lead to a tunnel vision (‘targetitis’). See Thiel & Leeuw (2002), De
                 Bruijn (2002) and the contributions to Lorenz (2008).
             The first negative effect of the use of performance measure-
             ment is that it is only directed at the measurable aspects of
             performance, such as the number of publications or citations,
             the type of journal an article was published in, or whether a
             clear research question was formulated in the first few pages
             of the publication. This means that even if one is able to for-
             mulate clear tools for measurement of legal research – which
             is not so likely in the varied legal discipline – they will not be
             able to include all aspects of quality. In other words, the intan-
             gibles, or what cannot be counted by measurement, simply
             become irrelevant. This can lead to perverse incentives for
             those academics who greatly value performance measurement.
             In a quest for prestige and tenure they might be tempted to
             trade in their professional habitus for an urge to score highly
             and deliver as many measurable achievements as possible.
             However, it is likely that researchers valued more highly by the
             community of scholars are not motivated by performing in the
             short term, and will be motivated by something else, namely
             by their quest for knowledge. This means that performance
             measurement does not say everything about the quality of
             the completed research, which always requires a substantive
             judgement by peers.
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse     131
               Research shows that introduction of performance measurement
               often leads to the neglect of long-term goals: an organization that
               scores highly today on the measurable factors is likely to score
               badly in the long run because of its neglect of the non-measurable
               factors that are important in increasing innovation and employee
               satisfaction. See De Bruijn (2002). This carries a risk of perverse
               effects: it is certain that researchers have to be productive, but
               publishing twenty articles a year does not in itself make someone
               a better researcher. It is more likely that, in this case, a slicing
               strategy was applied: research was divided over as many papers
               as possible as if it were a sausage. The better thing to do would
               have been to make one lengthy article or book that is likely to
               have a bigger impact in the long term. For the same reason one
               can criticize a unilateral focus on counting PhD defences as a
               quality indicator: performance measurement in general tells
               us surprisingly little about true quality. The adverse effects of
               performance indicators have also been identified in healthcare:
               the quantitative measuring of achievements does not enhance
               the quality of hospitals or family doctors, but tends to reduce
               intrinsic motivation to do the right thing, see for example Bevan
               & Hood (2006).
                  This discussion makes it clear that the principal function of
               performance indicators is to make partly explicit what we can
               expect a researcher to do (see also infra, no. 61). It also shows
               that rewarding researchers based on quantitative criteria does not
               necessarily lead to a higher quality of work. Any academic worth
               his salt is driven by something else, that is to say what Shapin
               2008, 263 calls ‘the desire for a “free space” in which to conduct
               the inquiries that one wants to conduct, that one might even feel
               oneself driven to conduct’. Such an animated and single-minded
               researcher will lose his motivation if his work disintegrates in a
               business-like fashion into quantifiable factors of measurement.
               Because he is not trusted as an academic, he degenerates from a
               passionate professional into an externally directed anonymous
               ‘processor’. This is a well-known phenomenon in other fields as
               well: job motivation diminishes as soon as quality is only meas-
               ured in terms of quantitative output. See Lorenz (2008, 179), and
               Osterloh & Frey (2010, 14): ‘Autonomy is the most important
               precondition for intrinsic motivation, which in turn is required
               for creative research.’
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             132                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             Secondly, market thinking – if taken seriously – leads to
             a form of competition that is wrong for the university.
             Academic practice is already as competitive as can be: each
             researcher strives to write the most thought-provoking books
             and articles and to teach students in the best possible way. The
             achievements of colleagues in this respect are a permanent
             source of comparison and inspiration. In addition to this, the
             academic community as a forum of judgement decides how
             research is to be valued: first with the acceptance of the manu-
             script by the editorial board of the journal or book series, and
             then, after the actual publication, by all other peers. In addi-
             tion, active academics are perpetually assessed in other ways:
             through grant applications: consideration for editorial boards:
             invitations to conference lectures: and so on). Competition in
             this sense is inherent in academic life.
                However, this type of competition is fundamentally dif-
             ferent from the sort that is propagated under the new public
             management. Thus, the Leiden Professor of Astrophysics,
             Vincent Icke, warns that competition along the lines of the
             business model leads to the formation of blocs, chauvinism
             and short-term thinking, all of which are counterproductive to
             science. As discussed above, Frits van Oostrom warns against
             the dangers of organizing a faculty into a federative whole in
             which the separate sections – indeed as if they were business
             units – have to fight for their own profit, and cooperation with
             colleagues next door is seen as betrayal.
                 See Icke (in Lorenz 2008, 256) and Van Oostrom (2007, 14).
                 In terms of the new public management, this means that finan-
                 cial competition drives out the so-called ‘system responsibility’:
                 because units are supposed to compete with each other, they no
                 longer work together and do not share their knowledge. The lack
                 of openness, discussion and cooperation caused by this is at odds
                 with the type of competition that science is all about: not for the
                 money, but for the appeal of ideas, and therefore – as Bourdieu
                 (1984) claims – for symbolic capital in the form of reputation.
                 This competition is as strong in little fields as in international
                 scholarship. Icke (in Lorenz 2008, 257) rightly describes it as
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse      133
               being of a staggering fierceness: ‘An academic telling nonsense
               in a lecture or at a colloquium or conference is not mildly cen-
               sured, but torn to shreds.’ It has already been seen above (no. 50)
               that publishing insights that go against prevailing opinion is
               sometimes met with heavy resistance. It is also unproven that
               economic competition leads to better research. This belief was
               manifest in the action of Rainer Goebel, a well-known German
               professor of Neurocognition, who repeatedly declined offers to
               exchange Maastricht for Stanford, claiming that doing so would
               force him to compete with his colleagues rather than collaborate
               with them.
           61.     An Alternative Approach
           The previous section described the consequences of market
           thinking on (fundamental) academic research and education.
           These consequences have luckily not materialized yet. For
           example, the extent to which performance measurement is
           seen as important is, in the end, dependent on the administra-
           tor’s desire to be in control. In the law faculties, this admin-
           istrator is, in most cases, someone who is a legal scholar
           himself and therefore aware of the limited value of perform-
           ance indicators. And yet, there is every reason to sketch
           the contours of how things could be done differently. This
           section will make three main points regarding this alternative
           approach.
               An alternative approach is also needed because European law
               faculties are highly dependent on the central university adminis-
               tration, which is in turn dependent on government funding. There
               can come a moment when the external administrative pressures
               become so acute that law faculties have to swallow new public
               management techniques in governing their organization. The
               worst case scenario here, and what the universities must prevent
               at all costs, is for the assessment of performance indicators to fall
               in the hands of a micro-managing macho manager, which would
               surely lead to the perversion of the system already discussed,
               turning assessments into bureaucratic, pointless rituals. Cf. De
               Bruijn (2002).
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             134                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             First, it must be emphasized that there is nothing wrong with
             developing performance indicators in and of itself because
             they do in fact clarify what the university can expect from its
             academics. However, it is essential that these indicators are
             not purely based on quantitative factors, but are also suited to
             measuring quality: they must reflect what the academic com-
             munity sees as good legal research. And even if this require-
             ment is met, it must be accepted that they can only be used as
             instruments in a broader context, and can never be considered
             as valid replacements for peer evaluations. Furthermore, they
             should have only a limited role when it comes to determining
             funding.
                 The literature is unanimous in saying that performance indica-
                 tors must only be used moderately. See, amongst many others,
                 De Bruijn (2002) and Thiel & Leeuw (2002). This is reflected in
                 reports on the value of research assessments issued by various
                 agencies dealing with higher education. Thus, in the European
                 Commission’s report, Assessing Europe’s University-Based
                 Research (2010, 36ff.), it is argued that ‘those being assessed
                 need to have confidence that the indicators are appropriate
                 and truthful’. In the Netherlands, the various reports published
                 by the Association of Universities in the Netherlands (VSNU
                 2005 and 2007) and the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts
                 and Sciences (KNAW 2005 and 2011) say the same thing. This
                 makes it important that legal science does not yield to the temp-
                 tation of developing indicators that are comparable to those in
                 other disciplines (such as citation analysis and elaborate rank-
                 ings of journals) if the use of these methods does not lead to a
                 fair judgement of what legal scholars regard as good research.
                 This is why these reports do not primarily look at measurable
                 factors, but at qualitative indicators instead (such as the sub-
                 stantive quality of publications and so-called ‘esteem indicators’
                 that reflect how the research community regards an individual
                 researcher – based on awards, fellowships, keynote addresses,
                 editorial roles, organization of conferences and elected member-
                 ships of academies). In addition to this, the reports emphasize
                 that research assessments must always pay attention to the
                 ‘story’ behind the numbers (see also De Bruijn 2002) and that
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse      135
               administrators should accept that not everything can be quan-
               tified. Put differently, there must be some resistance, at least,
               to the natural inclination of managers to make research as
               measurable as possible.
                  There is a recent tendency to give a large role to bibliomet-
               ric factors in reaching a judgement about the quality of legal
               research. It is certainly not impossible to make use of these
               factors in law and humanities, but – as emphasized in a recent
               report issued by the KNAW (2011, 43) – ‘bibliometric quality
               indicators must be used cautiously. Counting articles measures
               only productivity; counting citations measures impact, which is
               not necessarily the same thing as quality (. . .).’ Fifty journals in
               the field of humanities therefore recently indicated they no longer
               wished to be classified in the European Reference Index for the
               Humanities, not because they ranked low in this index (which was
               not the case), but because of their view that this ranking ‘depends
               on a fundamental misunderstanding of conduct and publication
               of research in our field, and in the humanities in general. (.  .  .)
               Great research may be published anywhere and in any language.
               Truly ground-breaking work may be more likely to appear from
               marginal, dissident or unexpected sources, rather than from a
               well-established and entrenched mainstream. Our journals are
               various, heterogeneous and distinct. Some are aimed at a broad,
               general and international readership, others are more specialized
               in their content and implied audience. Their scope and readership
               say nothing about the quality of their intellectual content’ (Cook
               et al. 2009).
                  In order to avoid simplistic judgements based on bibliometric
               factors alone, one must also be careful about the introduction
               of a ‘points system’ in measuring quality. Such systems can be
               useful, but they overplay their part if they refer to other criteria
               for quality than those accepted by the academic community.
               Siems (2008, 148) cites Ruhl, who has proposed to introduce a
               scale of points to rank academic work in law. His suggestion is
               to give two points to descriptive doctrinal work and ten points
               to empirical work, if this studies the influence of law on society.
               Another example of a points system and its application can be
               seen in a ranking of German law faculties (see Ipsen 2005, 426)
               using the number of pages (three or four pages: one point; more
               than 100 pages: fifteen points) and the status of the journal (if
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             136                 The mind and method of the legal academic
                 peer reviewed, the score was to be multiplied by a factor three) as
                 variables. Ipsen rightly qualifies this system as ‘hostile to books’
                 because the academic legal forum does not consider books as
                 inherently inferior to articles. This is confirmed if one carries out
                 citation analyses of law journals: these usually show that books
                 are the most-cited sources. A specific analysis of the 2005 volume
                 of the Dutch main journal for private law (Nederlands Tijdschrift
                 voor Burgerlijk Recht) shows that of the 1089 references in total,
                 547 are to books and contributions to books (the most cited
                 journal being that journal itself).
                    Another consequence of the limited value of performance
                 indicators is that we must be careful about transferring money
                 from so-called ‘internal funding’ (mostly government funding) to
                 ‘external funding’ (such as funding by research councils and char-
                 ities). This is so not only because the government takes money
                 away from universities and tasks funding organizations to redis-
                 tribute it (which is a good thing if based on quality assessment),
                 but also because universities themselves make the distribution of
                 money between faculties increasingly contingent on the faculties’
                 external funding sources and their ability to attract commercial
                 funding from private companies. This is denounced by many,
                 including Van Oostrom (2006), who labelled this as an attack
                 on the academic heart of the university: money for fundamental
                 research and for new PhD positions must now increasingly be
                 obtained through funding organizations, even though there is no
                 evidence that doing so will lead to a better qualitative output. It
                 seems obnoxious to have to fight for every penny in order to be
                 able to do what the university is for.
             This leads me to the second point. Ultimately, the assessment
             of research must always come from colleagues within the aca-
             demic community (peers). As already indicated above (no. 60),
             international scholarly practice is full of assessment mecha-
             nisms. Peer review is not limited to decisions about publica-
             tions, but extends also to academic appointments, assessment
             of research proposals, invitations to conferences, election to
             editorial boards, and so on. Although this method is certainly
             not ideal, assessment by colleagues seems to be the best pos-
             sible option.
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse       137
               The inability of bibliometric methods to measure the quality of
               legal research accurately is the very reason why the importance
               of the peer review process must be valued above all else. This is
               also why the United Kingdom Research Assessment Exercise in
               2008 decided to evaluate submissions relying on ‘panel J’ (dealing
               with law) on the basis of a detailed examination of virtually all the
               submitted outputs ‘on their own merits’. After careful considera-
               tion, it was also decided that the exercise would not rank any of
               the journals. The importance of peer review is confirmed by the
               KNAW report, Judging Research on its Merits (2005), which con-
               cluded that, in any research assessment, the main publications are
               to be assessed by peers, simply because only colleagues can judge
               what is the best and what is not.
                  This does not mean that peer review is ideal, but it does mean
               that there is nothing better, at least at this current juncture of
               legal scholarship. The disadvantages are described in detail by
               Edmond (2008) and in more expressive language by Ad Lagendijk
               (1998): ‘It is often driving me mad. If you scored well six times in a
               row with your grant applications, it is obvious to assume that the
               quality is also high the seventh time around. But this could not be
               further from the truth: the seventh time the complete assessment
               circus is again let loose on you and you are supposed to fill in all
               these forms. I know that this is the price one has to pay for being
               allowed to work with the taxpayer’s money.’ The fact that peer
               review by editorial boards does not bring universal happiness
               either is shown by two well-known cases. In 1996, the prominent
               journal Social Text published an article by the American physicist
               Alan Sokal. The article was, in the words of Sokal (1996) himself,
               ‘a pastiche of left-wing cant, fawning references, grandiose quo-
               tations, and outright nonsense’ and he had submitted it only to
               demonstrate the obliviousness of the editors, who found much
               more importance in who had written it, and how it sounded,
               than in actually assessing its contents. Similarly in 2002, a young
               German physicist, Jan Hendrik Schön made similar exposé of the
               peer review system, although in his case, his intent was more mali-
               cious: in a relatively short time, he managed to have no less than
               28 of his articles accepted by prestigious journals such as Nature,
               Science and Physical Review Letters. Despite the supposedly
               meticulous review procedure, the great majority of these articles
               proved to be fraudulent.
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             138                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             The use of peer review implies that colleagues within the aca-
             demic sub-community have a shared notion of what is ‘good’
             research. I can deal briefly with this after everything that I
             have said above about the importance of creative research
             and of methodological pluralism: good research is creative
             and creativity comes in many varieties. This diversity is also
             fruitful because it allows us to appreciate different approaches
             and acknowledge that jurists can contribute in their own way
             to obtaining greater knowledge of the law. It also seems to be
             the international consensus that one type of research is not in
             itself better than another.
                 See supra, nos. 51 and 57. It is important to clarify what makes
                 particular research good. There seems to be international una-
                 nimity about the requirement that good academic work in law
                 should be original or creative. The British Research Assessment
                 Exercise (RAE) adds that originality, significance and rigour
                 are the three criteria that contribute most to the quality of an
                 article, while in Germany ‘interdisciplinarity’ and ‘internation-
                 alization’ are the keywords of good research (Ipsen 2005, 425).
                 Korobkin (1999, 860), on American research, comments, that
                 ‘“valuable” scholarship is that which is both insightful and
                 original’ and Chemerinsky (2009, 891) asks of scholarship that
                 it be significant and original. This is also reflected in the reports
                 of the Dutch VSNU-committees on the quality of legal research
                 (VSNU 2005 and 2007) and in the Flemish approach (<www.
                 vlir.be>).
                    These general requirements leave much room for further inter-
                 pretation, and rightly so, as there are many types of research that
                 might meet these requirements. With Siems (2008, 248), I am
                 of the opinion that the only right approach is one of tolerance.
                 This is not any different in other disciplines. As the Fields Medal
                 winner, Terence Tao (2007), who offers a non-exhaustive enu-
                 meration of as many as 21 types of ‘good’ mathematical research,
                 claims: ‘this diverse and multifaceted nature of “good mathemat-
                 ics” is very healthy for mathematics as a whole, as it allows us
                 to pursue many different approaches to the subject, and exploit
                 many different types of mathematical talent.’
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse   139
           The assessment mechanisms ingrained in scholarly practice
           must not be replaced by bibliometric criteria. Instead, an attrac-
           tive alternative, which could ensure high quality academic
           work, is the proposal made by Margit Osterloh and Bruno
           Frey, which promotes a careful selection and socialization of
           aspiring scholars. In their view, recruitment is the essential
           element of quality control: future colleagues should master the
           state of the art, have a ‘taste for science’ and be able to direct
           themselves. As soon as someone is appointed on the basis of
           these assets and other strict professional academic criteria
           (quality of publications and of teaching), this person should be
           trusted and be given a wide range of autonomy. It may be that
           some will misuse their autonomy and waste funds, but this is the
           price to be paid for the majority of high performers to flourish.
           Most hired researchers are likely to be motivated by the auton-
           omy and resources they receive. The existence of basic funding
           for everyone who meets the high standards to be recruited will
           also guarantee a diversity of different approaches. This is the
           system of quality control employed at top law schools in the
           United States, including but not limited to Harvard University
           and the University of Chicago.
               See Osterloh & Frey (2010, 15ff.), who emphasize that continu-
               ous research assessments only lead to mediocrity: ‘Measurement
               exerts not only pressure to produce predictable but unexciting
               research outcomes (. . .). Path-breaking contributions are exactly
               those at variance with accepted criteria’ (cf. Frey & Osterloh
               2006, 5). Having to meet identical standards (and hence less
               methodological pluralism) means that one is no longer able to
               broaden one’s horizon. This is why these authors propose to trade
               in the distribution of means on the basis of output control for
               distribution based on process control, with the most important
               criteria being whether the selection procedures is adequate and
               whether academics have sufficient autonomy. Differentiation
               among scholars is possible in the way described by Lagendijk
               (1997): ‘Decide on basis of past performance who are the best aca-
               demics, give them ample funds for a five-year-period and assess
               them rigorously afterwards’ (see also supra, no. 60).
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             140                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             The third point is that administrators and academics must show
             determination in pursuing what they see as the main mission of
             their university. Administrators are increasingly prone to argue
             in favour of the type of research they desire under the guise of
             enhancing quality. There is nothing against a faculty taking
             the deliberate decision to (for example) devote itself to interna-
             tional or empirical research, or instead, aim for producing the
             best future practitioners. However, such choices must not be
             motivated by claiming that one type of research is intrinsically
             better than another. Academics, for their part, must not be led
             astray by the control mechanisms of the new public manage-
             ment and should primarily push their own research agenda. In
             particular, university chairs have a role as exemplars here.
                 I am of the opinion that universities should make well-founded
                 choices in favour of certain types of research and education more
                 than they currently do. The overwhelming majority of law facul-
                 ties in Europe focus on teaching national law. It is also difficult to
                 maintain that there are many differences in substance or quality
                 between most law faculties within a country. When it comes to
                 research, choices are sometimes made but then often obscured
                 with a reference to the supposedly higher quality of a certain type
                 of research (usually the more internationally oriented). Although
                 I openly advocate a much more international education and
                 research agenda (see also infra, no. 62), I do not mean to suggest
                 that the quality of a more domestically focused education is neces-
                 sarily any less than an education with a more international focus.
                    Academics must also show more courage and argue that their
                 job is first and foremost a creative one that can therefore never
                 be made entirely subject to managerial control. The development
                 that Steven Shapin (2008) describes – from science as a voca-
                 tion to science as a completely professional career – is luckily
                 not complete. This is because an academic should not be a mere
                 bureaucrat, but a charismatic leader (as Max Weber (1946)
                 famously said). Relying on the witness reports of their students,
                 paradigmatic examples of charismatic academic leaders in the last
                 century include notable figures such as Albert Einstein, Richard
                 Feynman and Johan Huizinga and – in law – Harry Lawson, Otto
                 Kahn-Freund, David Daube and René David. They all spread
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse    141
               the word about the importance of their field and propagated – as
               Feynman (1999) calls it – ‘the pleasure of finding things out’.
           62.     Consequences for Legal Education
           The focus of this book until now has been almost exclusively
           on legal research. It would, however, be wrong to suggest
           that legal scholarship can stand apart from teaching the law:
           ideally the two are closely related. This is why this last section
           of the book pays particular attention to the consequences for
           legal education of the views discussed above about law and
           legal research. These consequences flow directly from the
           argumentative character of law (see in particular nos. 31 and
           40 above), Legal education must be as little directed towards
           finding ‘certain’ rules or outcomes as legal scholarship. The
           main aim of legal education must be to explore and contrast
           the implications of conflicting normative positions. Students
           should not just learn one system of law, but ought to be
           exposed to alternative ways of achieving justice. The focus is
           then on learning a way of thinking, much more than on getting
           to know the intricate details of some substantive law. The fol-
           lowing sections discuss the arguments in favour of this new
           type of legal education and how it can be enacted.
              It is surprising that legal education in Europe is usually
           focused on presenting the law as coming from some author-
           ity and therefore on how it is. Thus, virtually all textbooks
           aim to give a description of the existing national law, seem-
           ingly trying to ban uncertainty as much as possible. This does
           not only make legal education positivist and national, it also
           makes it too focused on the contents of the rules, although we
           know that this tends to change rapidly.
               Atiyah & Summers (1987, 394) note the same thing: ‘The tone of
               textbooks is often dogmatic, with decisions presented as if they
               were strict decisions from basic principles. (.  .  .) The ultimate
               and all-pervasive aim is to lay out the law as it stood on the day
               the book went to press.’ This positivist thinking carries the risk
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             142                 The mind and method of the legal academic
                 that students become obsessed with the here and now without
                 reflecting upon how the law could read. This insight that legal
                 education must not focus on the apparent certainties introduced
                 by the national legislature and courts is of course not new. Rudolf
                 Von Jhering ([1998, 52]) was already writing back in 1868 about
                 positivism as the ‘mortal enemy’ of jurisprudence: ‘it downgrades
                 legal science to a mere trade and must therefore be fought to the
                 death’.
             The best legal education ought to teach students a method:
             they need to learn which arguments exist for and against
             certain solutions, how to weigh these arguments and how to
             deal with competing systems of rules. This means that the cur-
             riculum must be much more international than it is today: stu-
             dents should learn about the fact that different societies give a
             different weight to issues such as social justice, efficiency, the
             equality of men and women, and the value of life. They should
             learn to think through the consequences of choices made
             in different societies, to understand why these choices were
             made, and to argue why they think one choice is better than
             the other. The starting point, therefore, is not the German or
             French (or any other national) law, but a particular question
             and the way in which this question is answered in various juris-
             dictions. This calls for a truly European (or global) education
             in the bachelor phase of the curriculum, followed by a masters
             in one specific national legal system.
                 Three arguments can be put forward in favour of a more inter-
                 national approach to teaching the law. The first is based on the
                 changing character of the law itself, the second on the require-
                 ments an academic study should meet, and the third on the impor-
                 tance of attracting highly motivated students to law programmes.
                 See also Smits (2011).
                    The first argument in favour of a truly European education is
                 that the law itself is no longer a national phenomenon. The law
                 increasingly flows from sources outside the national border and
                 is often the product of private initiatives (see supra, no. 25). Any
                 modern legal education should take these norms into account, not
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse     143
               only because they are indispensable in understanding the exist-
               ing law (and consequently play a big role in practice), but also
               because they make students realize that the law is not necessarily
               tied to the nation state. Patrick Glenn (2006, 59) rightly observes
               that if the law is no longer considered exclusively in terms of
               national sources, the discipline of law ‘must assume the cognitive
               burden of providing information on law beyond national borders’
               (also see supra, no. 39). This implies that a legal education based
               exclusively on the intricacies of national legislation and court
               decisions is an inadequate one.
                  It would be possible to argue that this plurality of sources does
               not force us to adopt any far-reaching type of international legal
               education: one could still teach the national law and add some
               international and comparative elements here and there. I do not
               deny this as a possibility (it is even common practice at most
               law schools), but I do not think that this is the best way to teach
               students in today’s globalizing world. Even if one asserts that
               the only goal of legal education is to offer a professional training
               for future practitioners (which I would deny), these practition-
               ers should be able to work in different legal systems in various
               countries to meet their clients’ needs. Even when graduates stay in
               their home country, they are increasingly advising multinational
               and foreign clients who want to know about different solutions.
               This calls for a much more rigorous international curriculum in
               which alternative approaches are sketched from the first day.
               Thus, teaching only one national law does not adequately prepare
               students for the world they have to work in.
                  In the last decade, the attention given to comparative and
               European aspects of the law has increased significantly in most
               curricula. Various international joint degree programmes
               were put into place, including the Dutch-German Hanse Law
               School. Recent overviews of this development can be found in
               special issues on transnational legal education in the Penn State
               International Law Review (26 (2008) no. 4) and in the German Law
               Journal (10 (2009) no. 7). The premise of these curricula is that
               one must first learn the ‘own’ (national) law and that only in the
               second stage can attention be paid to foreign law. The stimulat-
               ing experiences of the Maastricht European Law School and
               the ‘transsystemic’ curriculum of the McGill Faculty of Law in
               Montreal (where from the very first year, civil law and common
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             144                 The mind and method of the legal academic
                 law are taught in an integrated way) show that this can be done
                 differently. I have no doubt that this integrative model is the best
                 teaching method available to meet the needs of an international
                 legal education. Students dealing with problems that require con-
                 siderations of multiple jurisdictions tend to form pluralistic legal
                 minds contrary to the ‘mind fixing’ that takes place under the
                 traditional curriculum. As Jaakko Husa (2009) rightly says: ‘This
                 creates an implicit mono-epistemology, which makes lawyers
                 regard their own system as “normal” and other systems as “not-
                 normal” or, at least, something that is “less-normal”. From this
                 mono-epistemic platform, the law student is first immersed in the
                 one-approach-thinking, which later makes it difficult to epistemo-
                 logically adapt to transnational pluralism and to genuinely accept
                 different approaches.’
                    The rise of these new types of transnational curricula was
                 characterized as a new ‘Langdellian moment’ (Strauss 2006).
                 In the same way as Christopher Columbus Langdell initiated
                 a reform of American legal education towards the end of the
                 nineteenth century by introducing the Socratic method, McGill
                 and Maastricht lead the way towards a more international legal
                 education. This is not without difficulties: this integrated method
                 requires not only new teaching materials and the hiring of staff
                 members with international experience, but it also implies that
                 graduates may not have direct access to the legal profession
                 because the legislation has yet to adapt to the needs of a rapidly
                 internationalizing society. If these problems can be overcome, it
                 will lead to truly international law faculties that will be able to
                 compete for students and staff from all over Europe. In addition,
                 it will lead to a much-desired differentiation among law faculties
                 (see also supra, no. 61).
                    The second argument in favour of an international legal educa-
                 tion is that it meets the requirements of an academic study better
                 (on these requirements: Bell 2003 and Kronman 2007). A legal
                 education should, in my view, do at least two things: it should offer
                 a specialized professional training in becoming a lawyer and it
                 should shape students to become academics. The latter means that
                 students should learn to use the law not only as an instrument, but
                 also to think about it in an intellectual way. Martha Nussbaum
                 (2003) aptly argues that in today’s world, this academic aspect
                 means that students have to prepare for ‘global citizenship’: they
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse      145
               should learn how to become a citizen, not only of their country
               and their local community, but also of the increasingly interlock-
               ing and interdependent world that they live in. This means, in my
               view, that an academic legal education should educate students
               about the contingency of the law: students have to be exposed
               to legal diversity, not only through grasping common law and
               civil law (and the varieties within these legal families), but also
               by extending their understanding to Nordic, Asian and Islamic
               laws. These jurisdictions will tell them how different choices can
               be made. If this ‘dialogue with otherness’ (cf. Morisette 2002) is at
               the core of legal education, to focus on only one or two jurisdic-
               tions would be a poor and rather limited curriculum. A true legal
               education is only worth its salt if it shows alternative outcomes to
               common problems to the full extent.
                  It must be emphasized that this argument is not just about
               teaching students about multiple legal systems; it is about encour-
               aging students to learn the legal way of thinking (to ‘think like a
               lawyer’). It is similar in a way to what economists do in adopting
               a method of analysis (‘the economic approach’): law is ideally
               regarded as a method and not as a subject. Under this view,
               students no longer study English law or German law, but they
               learn how to apply a legal approach to the questions that society
               is facing. In doing so, they learn that views on ‘what ought to
               be’ necessarily differ from one jurisdiction to another, and that
               legal scholarship deals with exploring and contrasting the impli-
               cations of these conflicting normative positions. Legal scholars
               do not search for what the just society is, but discuss alterna-
               tives. Although after two hundred years of teaching only one
               law, many law schools may be apprehensive of, or even resistant
               to, such a transition, it does not mean that it is impossible. One
               should realize that in the 1000 years or so in which the law has
               been taught at universities, the last two hundred years have been
               exceptional: before the dawn of the nineteenth century, students
               learned about more than one law, be it Roman law and canon
               law, common law and mercantile law, or Roman law and local
               law. It was self-evident that all of these laws had a rationality
               of their own and could not be brought under one heading. The
               academic degrees that law graduates receive (LL.B (legum bacca-
               laureus or Bachelor of Laws), LL.M (legum magister or Master of
               Laws) and LL.D (Doctor of Laws) still remind us of this practice.
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             146                 The mind and method of the legal academic
                    The final argument for why an international legal education
                 is preferable to a national one is that it will attract students who
                 are more motivated. In this respect, the success story of the cur-
                 riculum reform made by Langdell at Harvard is telling: before
                 Langdell became the dean of Harvard Law School in 1870, law
                 was taught by way of lectures, textbooks and moot courts. This
                 was good enough for the great majority of students, but it did not
                 give any real intellectual stimulation to the best among them. This
                 all changed when Langdell introduced the case method (and com-
                 bined it with the Socratic method). This new method significantly
                 intensified the academic rigour of the programme, which in turn
                 attracted more ambitious students, craving intellectual stimula-
                 tion, to the programme. After graduation, these students were
                 hired by the top law firms in New York because of their ability
                 to deal with more than one state’s jurisdiction (Strauss 2006). In
                 most European countries today, the pursuit of a legal education
                 is seen as a rather meek pursuit. This is at least partly caused by
                 the way in which law is often taught, portrayed as something
                 authoritative and inalterable. I believe this perception of the law
                 is wrong. A European or cosmopolitan legal education can be a
                 real intellectual challenge, attracting even more capable students
                 and producing better graduates.
             Furthermore, international legal education need not take
             place in the language of the country where the university is
             located: an international law curriculum can be taught in
             English (or in any other language). The objections sometimes
             expressed against teaching law in English stem generally from
             the fear that in learning about non-English legal concepts in
             English, a certain essence of those concepts might get lost in
             the translation. However, a valid reason to quash these fears is
             to realize that the emphasis of European or global legal educa-
             tion is not on what the actual texts say or their interpretation,
             but on the arguments behind the concepts.
                 Of course, it does not make any sense (nor should one try) to
                 teach Dutch, German, Finnish, or another national law, in
                 English. However, this is not the point of the type of European
                 legal education proposed in this section: the aim of such a pro-
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                              Organization of the legal-academic discourse        147
               gramme would be teach students to think like a lawyer in an
               international setting. This means a necessary turn away from the
               texts and their interpretation towards the arguments behind these
               texts. These arguments can very well be discussed in English as
               they are not dependent on one national jurisdiction. The prereq-
               uisite is that international textbooks in English become available
               on a much larger scale than is the case today. See, on English as a
               language for research, also supra, no. 48.
           Another point of discussion is what the most effective model
           of teaching is in a transnational legal curriculum. If we assume
           that students are to be persuaded to consider a wide variety of
           sources to construct their own understanding (and not that of
           the learned author or lecturer) of the legal problem, the ideal
           teaching method is certainly not to focus on doctrinal ques-
           tions or to teach ‘comparative law’ as such. What works best
           is to select a topic and to provide materials on how this topic
           is dealt with in various jurisdictions.
               Kurt Lipstein (1992, 258) aptly describes the ideal process: ‘The
               student must in his time examine the reading matter, possibly
               have recourse to further literature and practice cited there before
               coming to the classroom. Here accounts given by members of the
               class reporting on unfamiliar topics will be amplified, collected
               and explained by the lecturer (. . .). This exchange (. . .) requires a
               much greater participation by the directing lecturer and the audi-
               ence (. . .).’ This practice fits in with various ‘teaching theories’.
               One of these theories is problem-based learning (PBL), adopted
               at various law schools throughout the world including Maastricht
               University’s Faculty of Law (see, on this faculty’s European Law
               School programme, Heringa & Akkermans 2011). PBL regards
               discussion of carefully designed problems in small groups, rather
               than systematic overviews in big lectures, as the main stimulus
               for learning. PBL can work well if it is sufficiently adapted to
               legal education and understood in a broad sense as focusing on
               a discussion of problems with multiple solutions. In my own
               experience, a vital component of successful PBL is the lecturer’s
               qualification as a reputable academic rather than as a mere ‘facili-
               tator’ of discussions. As George Stigler (1963, 14) once put it: he
SMITS 9780857936547 PRINT.indd 147                                                       13/08/2012 08:19
             148                 The mind and method of the legal academic
                 is ‘to fan the spark of genuine intellectual curiosity and (. . .) to
                 communicate the enormous adventure and the knightly conduct
                 in the quest for knowledge’.
                    PBL is not the only educational theory consistent with small
                 group teaching aimed at an exchange of ideas about alternative
                 problem solving. The Socratic method, consisting of a dialogue
                 between lecturer and students, in question and answer format,
                 also enables ‘deep’ learning. In American law schools, this
                 Socratic method is seen as a highly successful approach to two
                 things PBL also does: teach students to think like a lawyer and to
                 practise their skills. I do not think PBL and the Socratic method
                 differ fundamentally, except for the fact that in PBL, there seems
                 to be a preference for smaller groups of students with twelve being
                 about the maximum. However, the American experience shows it
                 is very possible to teach larger groups of students. See also Rakoff
                 & Minow (2007).
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           Synopsis
           63.     Four Claims
           This book began with the observation that the aims, methods
           and organization of legal scholarship have received a lot of
           attention in the last few years. What followed can be seen as
           an attempt to cope with this ‘identity crisis’. This synopsis
           does not offer a detailed summary of that attempt but, instead,
           highlights four key points, which in my view are essential if we
           are to take legal scholarship seriously and avert the crisis that
           confronts legal scholars.
              First, a clearer vision of the tasks assigned to legal scholar-
           ship is required. Legal academics can pursue different goals
           but, in my view, the core of their discipline is the question,
           ‘What are people legally obliged to do?’ The accompanying
           research method is to identify and to think through arguments
           for and against certain solutions and to see whether these
           arguments can be accepted or not in the normative setting of
           a specific jurisdiction. Existing jurisdictions are thus seen as
           ‘laboratories’ in dealing with conflicting normative positions.
           One need not accept this specific interpretation of the task of
           legal science to recognize that a clearer formulation of its aim
           is needed. The legal discipline will otherwise remain a pariah
           in the company of other academic disciplines that can describe
           precisely what is at their core.
              Secondly, this interpretation puts it beyond doubt that legal
           science cannot simply rely on the authority of the legislature
           and the judiciary to answer the question, ‘What ought we
           legally to do?’ Those in power have always claimed that the
           law is given by an authority and, hence, is no more suited to
           further discussion than God giving the Ten Commandments
                                          149
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             150                 The mind and method of the legal academic
             to Moses, the Oracle at Delphi giving Lycurgus the laws of
             Sparta, or Napoleon dispensing the Code Civil. Jurists know
             better than this. The core of the academic engagement with
             the law (at least in the normative sense) is to show time and
             time again how we can debate what ought to be, even if there
             is already a consensus amongst the majority. The theoretical
             foundation of this was a view of the law as an organically
             growing whole, ‘fined and refined by an infinite number of
             grave and learned men’ (as the student says in Hobbes’s A
             Dialogue between a Philosopher and a Student of the Common
             Laws of England).
                A third claim made in this book is that legal scholarship
             offers, most of all, a way of thinking: while the contents of the
             positive law are changeable, the legal academic must aim for
             the development of a method that can deal with the available
             materials. Again, the proposed ‘empirical-normative’ method
             need not be accepted as the only right one, as long as it is
             acknowledged that it is only by defining legal scholarship as
             a way of thinking, that it will no longer be dependent on the
             coincidental contents of the positive law. Inevitably, this also
             turns law into an international discipline and, that being the
             case, to make use of only national materials in answering the
             question, ‘What ought we legally to do?’, becomes blatantly
             inadequate.
                The final claim is that, if anything, legal scholarship must
             be original and in order to foster and nurture creativity, a
             research culture that allows freedom to the gifted researcher
             must be promoted. If too strictly enforced, ‘market thinking’
             with a unilateral focus on the measurability of performance
             would only obstruct the free flow of ideas and hinder creativity
             and motivation. It is also of great importance for law facul-
             ties to realize and understand that quality can come in many
             varieties. Restricting the types of research and teaching to a
             single ‘best’ method, is not likely to guarantee a high quality
             product.
                All in all, this book provides the insight that the legal disci-
             pline must not be heavily influenced by the aims and methods
SMITS 9780857936547 PRINT.indd 150                                            13/08/2012 08:19
                                       Synopsis                         151
           of other disciplines, which are often limited to understanding
           the social or physical reality. What the legal discipline must
           do instead is to capitalize on its strength, which is its ability
           to reflect upon what people and organizations legally ought
           to do.
SMITS 9780857936547 PRINT.indd 151                                             13/08/2012 08:19
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           Index
           The numbers refer to the sections.
           abortion 16, 51, 55                  Canon law 62
           Adat law 15                          Chicago Law School 61
           administrative law 7, 28             Cicero 8
           AHRC 53                              citation analysis 60, 61
           ALI 6                                civil law 16, 35, 62
           Aristotle 20, 37, 44, 56             civilology 16
           Arnold, M. 30                        Clark Medal 60
           Atiyah, P.S. 28, 40, 62              Coase, R.H. 13, 50, 56
           Austin, J.A. 1                       Coetzee, J.M. 50
                                                coherence 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 12, 16,
           Backhouse, R.E. 26, 54                    28, 33, 45, 46, 51
           Bacon, F. 2, 28                      Collier, C.W. 23
           Barendrecht, J.M. 35                 common law 13, 16, 35, 43, 62
           Becher, T. 1                         comparative law 11, 14, 15, 39,
           Beck, U. 40                               41, 42, 46, 51, 59, 62
           Becker, G.S. 23                      competition 42, 52, 60, 61
           Belgium 61                           conflict resolution 12, 15, 35
           Benda-Beckmann, F. Von 15            constitutional law 7, 30, 36, 39,
           Bentham, J. 7, 23                         48, 59
           Berlin, I. 46                        constitutional review 23, 30, 45
           Birks, P.B.H. 8                      consumer protection 5, 13, 39,
           Blackstone, W. 7                          42
           Bok, D. 58, 60                       contract law 5, 7, 8, 15, 16, 25,
           Bourdieu, P. 60                           27, 28, 33, 34, 36, 39, 42, 51
           Brandeis, L.D. 16, 39                cooperation 53, 59, 60
           Breyer, S.G. 39                      Corstens, G.J.M. 49
           Bundesverfassungsgericht 36          Court of Justice EU 34, 36
           Bydlinski, F. 22                     creativity 1, 7, 8, 28, 49, 50, 51,
                                                     56, 57, 59, 60, 61
           Calabresi, G. 50                     criminal law 5, 13, 16, 23, 25,
           Canaris, C.-W. 8, 51, 55                  30, 35, 39, 40, 51
                                           175
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             criminology 16, 51                        empirical-normative
             Critical Legal Studies 28, 45                 method 38, 39, 42, 45, 47,
             Crombag, H.F.M. 57                            48, 55
                                                       English 48, 61, 62
             Dankwardt, H. 34                          Epstein, L. 53, 55
             Dannemann, G. 39, 46                      Erasmus 30, 37
             Darwin, C.R. 27, 28                       ERC 60
             Daube, D. 61                              ESRC 53
             David, R. 61                              ethics 20, 26, 27, 39
             DCFR 25, 28, 42, 43                       European Law School 62
             death penalty 23, 30, 35, 39              European private law 7, 17, 25,
             debate 30, 32, 38, 40, 45, 49, 59             28, 34, 39, 41, 42, 43, 48,
             democracy 17, 25, 28, 35, 40, 41              51, 59
             Dennett, D.C. 27                          Europeanization 11, 17, 25, 27,
             DFG 20, 53                                    34, 40, 42, 43, 48, 62
             Dicey, A.V. 7                             Everaerts, N. 44
             differentiation 61, 62                    evolution 17, 27, 52
             dissenting opinion 49                     experiment 2, 6, 16, 20, 39, 54,
             doctrine 1, 2, 7, 8, 9, 10, 16, 33,           57, 59
                  37, 40, 45, 50, 55, 61
             dogmatics see doctrine                    false friends 15
             Domat, J. 8                               falsification 25, 51, 52, 54
             Donellus, H. 8, 50                        family law 39
             Donohue, J.J. 35, 51                      Feenstra, R. 17
             drinking age 39                           Feldbrugge, F.J.M. 56
             Dutch 61, 62                              Feynman, R.P. 2, 61
             dwarf tossing 36, 43                      Field, D.D. 2
             Dworkin, R.M. 7, 46, 51                   Fields Medal 52, 60, 61
                                                       figuratism 50, 52
             economics 2, 3, 11, 16, 20, 23,           Finnis, J.F. 5, 45
                  26, 27, 34, 53, 56, 57, 60           Fisk, J.B. 59
             Edwards, H.T. 1, 2                        Flyvbjerg, B. 44, 57
             efficiency 13, 27, 34, 46, 52             forum 2, 38, 54, 60, 61
             efficient breach 34                       Foucault, M. 10
             Ehrlich, E. 12, 16                        France 1, 36, 54
             Einstein, A. 61                           freedom of speech 36
             Ellickson, R.C. 16                        Frey, B.S. 60, 61
             empirical approach 1, 2, 5, 8,            Fried, C. 28
                  10, 12, 16, 20, 23, 27, 35, 39,      Friedman, D.D. 28
                  50, 51, 61                           Friedman, L.M. 14, 42
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                                            Index                               177
           Fuller, L.L. 40                      House MD 56
           functionalism 15, 35, 39, 43, 46     House of Lords 36, 39
           fundamental rights 36, 43            Huizinga, J.H. 6, 61
           funding 1, 49, 51, 59, 61            human dignity 34, 36
                                                Humanism 8, 50
           Gadamer, H.-G. 21                    humanities 6, 20, 52, 54, 56, 61
           Gaius 28                             Humboldt, A. Von 58, 60
           Gay, V.P. 52                         Hume, D. 57
           Geertz, C.J. 42, 57                  Husa, J. 15, 62
           Genn, H.G. 16
           Germany 1, 7, 10, 16, 20, 34,        Icke, V. 60
               36, 39, 42, 50, 53, 57, 60, 61   incommensurability 39, 46
           Gerven, W. van 51                    Indonesia 15
           Gestel, R.A.J. van 1, 53             innovation 50, 51, 60
           Glaeser, E.L. 16, 35                 interdisciplinarity 1, 2, 5, 8, 59,
           Glenn, H.P. 39, 62                        61
           global administrative law 9          internal perspective 1, 2, 7, 10,
           Goebel, R. 60                             11, 24, 25, 40
           Gould, S.J. 57                       internationalization see
           governance 12, 25                         Europeanization
           graduate schools 59                  Ipsen, J. 1, 59, 61
           Groot, A.D. de 54                    Islamic law 62
           Grotius, H. 17, 30, 37               Ius commune 43, 59
           Habermas, J. 21                      Jansen, N. 15, 25, 45
           Hage, J.C. 23                        Jhering, R. Von 16, 28, 50, 62
           Hand, B.L. 10                        journals see law journals
           Hanse Law School 62
           Hart, H.L.A. 5, 17, 27               Kahn-Freund, O. 61
           Harvard University 60, 61, 62        Kant, I. 9, 36
           Hayek, F.A. 27, 28                   Kantorowicz, H. 50
           Helsinki University 60               Kaplow, L. 34
           Hesen, G.G. 16                       Kelsen, H. 17, 27
           Hesselink, M.W. 27, 28, 38           Kennedy, D. 50
           Hobbes, T. 1, 63                     Kirchmann, J. Von 1
           Hoetink, H.R. 14                     Kleinwächter, F. 34
           Hoge Raad 27, 33, 36, 42, 49         KNAW 60, 61
           Holmes, O.W. 12, 16, 28, 44          Köndgen, J. 56
           Homo juridicus 19, 23, 24, 25        Koopmans, T. 9
           Horwitz, M.J. 14                     Korobkin, R.B. 16, 61
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             Kronman, A.T. 28, 62                      Llewellyn, K.N. 12, 15
             Kuhn, T.S. 52, 56                         Lorenz, C. 58, 60
                                                       Lorentz Centre 59
             Lagendijk, A. 50, 59, 61                  Lundstedt, A.V. 1
             Lambert, E. 42
             Langdell, C.C. 62                         Maastricht University 60, 62
             language 10, 15, 25, 61, 62               Macaulay, S. 16
             Larenz, K. 54, 55                         MacCormick, N. 55
             Latour, B. 21                             MacIntyre, A.C. 21, 44, 46
             Law and Economics 5, 13, 17,              Maine, H.S. 27
                  28, 34                               Markesinis, B.S. 39
             Law and Psychology 5, 17                  market efficiency 49, 58, 60, 61
             law journals 1, 5, 16, 49, 56,            Martinek, M. 8
                  59, 61                               Martins, H. 41
             Lawson, F.H. 61                           Mataja, V. 34
             legal education 1, 4, 10, 33, 50,         mathematics 8, 20, 37, 46, 52,
                  59, 62                                   59, 60, 61
             legal history 5, 11, 14, 17, 27, 51       McCall Smith, A. 26
             legal origins 35                          McCrudden, C. 1, 2, 5, 53
             legal scholarship                         McGill University 62
                arguments in 11, 17, 21, 28,           McKloskey, D.N. 57
                    30, 37, 40, 43, 52, 55, 59         Meijers, E.M. 8
                description in 5 ff., 22, 24, 62       Merkel, A. 1
                identity crisis 1, 2, 63               Merton, R.K. 59
                methodology 1, 30, 53, 54              method 1, 3, 6, 7, 8, 11, 14, 15,
                requirements 20, 21, 22, 25,               20, 21, 27, 30, 49, 53, 54, 56,
                    48, 57                                 58, 61, 62
                types 5 ff., 49, 51                    methodological nationalism 41
             legal realism 12, 16                      methodological pluralism 51,
             legal theory 3, 5, 17, 22, 25, 27,            57, 61
                  51                                   Micklitz, H.-W. 1
             Leibniz, G.W. 50                          Mill, J.S. 46
             Leibniz Prize 57, 60                      Millgram, E. 45
             Leiden University 59, 60                  Mommsen, C.M.T. 14
             LERU 60                                   Monateri, P.G. 14
             Lessig, L. 2                              Morality 40, 45
             Levitt, S.D. 16, 50, 51, 55               Morisette, Y.-M. 62
             library 56, 59                            Mulder, T. 1
             Lipstein, K. 62                           multilevel governance 17, 25,
             literature studies 6, 23                      41, 62
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           Nachfrist 42                          problem-based learning 62
           Napoleon 63                           progress 42, 52, 59
           Natural Law 5, 7, 8, 9, 25, 27        psychology 2, 6, 16, 20, 27, 53,
           Netherlands 1, 2, 4, 8, 15, 27,           57
              33, 36, 37, 42, 43, 49, 53, 54,    Pufendorf, S. 9, 50
              59, 60, 61, 62
           New Public Management 51,             RAE 59, 61
              60, 61                             Ranke, L. 14
           Nobel Prize 23, 50, 56, 57            ranking 1, 61
           NSF 53                                rational positivism 8, 44, 52, 56
           NTBR 61                               Rawls, J.B. 35, 51, 56
           Nussbaum, M.C. 44, 46, 62             replicability 21, 22, 54, 55
           NWO 20, 53                            research
                                                   agenda 5, 50, 60, 61
           Oostrom, F.P. van 58, 60, 61            assessment 1, 53, 59, 60, 61
           originality 7, 9, 49, 50, 51, 61        culture 58, 59, 61
           Osterloh, M. 61                         programmes 59
                                                   question 52, 55, 56, 57, 60
           path dependence 28                      schools 59
           Patterson, D. 54                      rhetorics 21, 32, 38, 56
           PECL 25, 42                           Rickert, H.J. 21
           peer review 1, 2, 54, 55, 59, 60,     Robbe-Grillet, A. 50
               61                                Roman law 8, 9, 14, 43, 62
           Perelman, C. 38                       Rosenberg, A. 26
           Perelman, G.J. 52                     Ruane, J.M. 5, 21
           performance 34, 42                    Rubin, E.L. 5, 7, 10, 21, 22, 23,
           performance indicators 60, 61              24, 30, 31, 37
           philosophy of law 5, 17
           pledge 45                             Sade, D.A.F. de 50
           political science 16, 27, 53, 55      Saffer, H. 35
           Popper, K.R. 27, 52, 54               Saleilles, R. 42
           Posner, E.A. 26                       Samuel, G. 35, 47
           Posner, R.A. 1, 2, 3, 8, 10, 13,      Sandel, M.J. 23
               25, 34, 35, 44, 50, 52, 55        Savigny, F.C. Von 7, 8, 27, 50,
           practical wisdom 44, 45, 47, 56           55
           prestige 53, 57, 60                   Scalia, A.G. 39
           principles 1, 7, 8, 16, 26, 28, 39,   Schama, S.M. 6
               40, 41, 42, 51, 55                science 2, 6, 8, 16, 20, 21, 22,
           private law 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 16, 22,        23, 42, 44, 52, 54, 56
               25, 28, 35, 43, 50                Schön, J.H. 61
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             Schoordijk, H.C.F. 33, 39                 Tamanaha, B.Z. 26, 28, 35
             serendipity 59, 60                        Tao, T. 61
             Shapin, S. 55, 59, 60, 61                 targetitis 60, 61
             Shavell, S.M. 34                          teaching see legal education
             Shleifer, A. 16, 35                       tertium comparationis 15, 39, 46
             Siems, M.M. 5, 16, 51, 61                 Teubner, G. 25
             Simon and Garfunkel 46                    Tijssen, H.E.B. 55
             Singer, J.W. 32, 33, 34, 35, 36,          tobacco advertising 34, 35
                  38, 39, 45, 48, 54                   topos 44
             Sitzfleisch 8                             Toulmin, S.E. 44, 46
             Skinner, B.F. 57                          Twining, W. 1, 7, 40
             slavery 34
             Smith, S.D. 45                            Ulen, T.S. 2, 16
             Snow, C.P. 21                             uniform law 17, 40, 41, 42, 43
             social justice 28, 34, 38, 55             United Kingdom 1, 2, 8, 16, 36,
             social sciences 1, 2, 20, 53, 56,             43, 53, 59, 61
                  61                                   United States 1, 2, 7, 10, 14, 16,
             social welfare 13, 26, 34, 46,                35, 39, 58, 59, 61, 62
                  51
             Sociology of Law 12, 16, 17               valorization 60
             Socratic method 62                        Vermeule, A. 35
             Sokal, A.D. 61                            VLIR 61
             South Africa 43, 50                       Vollenhoven, C. van 15
             Spinoza Prize 57, 60                      Vranken, J.B.M. 28, 50, 53, 55,
             spontaneous order 27, 28                      60
             Stair (James Dalrymple) 28                VSNU 60, 61
             Stanford University 60
             Stigler, G.J. 57, 62                      Walt, A.J. van der 8
             Stolker, C.J.J.M. 1, 2, 3, 49,            Weber, M. 12, 16, 61
                  59, 61                               Weinrib, E.J. 7, 10, 28, 35
             Strauss, P. 62                            Wilburg, W. 22
             string theory 52                          Wilhelmsson, T. 42
             Sunstein, C.R. 35                         Wilson, E.O. 27, 57
             Supiot, A. 23                             wrongful birth 36
             Supreme Court (US) 16, 35, 39
             systematization 1, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,         Zelst, B. van 28
                  17, 21, 22, 33, 40, 44, 45, 50,      Zimmermann, R. 14, 43, 56
                  51, 55, 57                           Zweigert, K. 15
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