Statistics as if legality mattered: The two-front politics of empirical legal studies

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Statistics as if legality mattered : The two-front politics of empirical legal studies. / Pavone, Tommaso; Mayoral, Juan.

The Politics of European Legal Research: behind the Method. ed. / Marija Barti; Jessica C. Lawrence. Edward Elgar Publishing, 2022. p. 78-93.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Pavone, T & Mayoral, J 2022, Statistics as if legality mattered: The two-front politics of empirical legal studies. in M Barti & J C. Lawrence (eds), The Politics of European Legal Research: behind the Method. Edward Elgar Publishing, pp. 78-93. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781802201192.00013

APA

Pavone, T., & Mayoral, J. (2022). Statistics as if legality mattered: The two-front politics of empirical legal studies. In M. Barti, & J. C. Lawrence (Eds.), The Politics of European Legal Research: behind the Method (pp. 78-93). Edward Elgar Publishing. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781802201192.00013

Vancouver

Pavone T, Mayoral J. Statistics as if legality mattered: The two-front politics of empirical legal studies. In Barti M, C. Lawrence J, editors, The Politics of European Legal Research: behind the Method. Edward Elgar Publishing. 2022. p. 78-93 https://doi.org/10.4337/9781802201192.00013

Author

Pavone, Tommaso ; Mayoral, Juan. / Statistics as if legality mattered : The two-front politics of empirical legal studies. The Politics of European Legal Research: behind the Method. editor / Marija Barti ; Jessica C. Lawrence. Edward Elgar Publishing, 2022. pp. 78-93

Bibtex

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title = "Statistics as if legality mattered: The two-front politics of empirical legal studies",
abstract = "This chapter conducts a political history of empirical legal studies (ELS). We begin by locating its American origins and its transatlantic crossing into Europe within broader structural changes in society and politics. We then zoom into legal academia and demonstrate how the rise of ELS has been undergirded by a two-front politics of institutional change. The first battle was waged in the arena of disciplinary politics: ELS sought to correct a perceived ideational and formalist bias within law faculties via a more realistic jurisprudence and by transplanting quantitative methodologies deployed by social scientists. As proponents of ELS faced resistances from colleagues, they embraced a strategy of institutional change centered on creating autonomous ELS journals, conferences, and centers that would project influence back into law facilities. The second battle was waged in the arena of knowledge politics: ELS embraced a conception of the 'empirical' as quantifiable data lending itself to statistical analyses responsive to evolving social and market needs. In so doing, ELS dissociated quantitative methodologies from the social science theories promoting their development and discounted qualitative approaches that could also advance the empirical study of law. Hence despite notable successes, ELS's disciplinary and knowledge politics also produced unintended consequences leading to some self-estrangement from both law faculties and the social sciences.",
author = "Tommaso Pavone and Juan Mayoral",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} The Editors and Contributors Severally 2022. All rights reserved.",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.4337/9781802201192.00013",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781802201185",
pages = "78--93",
editor = "Marija Barti and {C. Lawrence}, Jessica",
booktitle = "The Politics of European Legal Research",
publisher = "Edward Elgar Publishing",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Statistics as if legality mattered

T2 - The two-front politics of empirical legal studies

AU - Pavone, Tommaso

AU - Mayoral, Juan

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Editors and Contributors Severally 2022. All rights reserved.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - This chapter conducts a political history of empirical legal studies (ELS). We begin by locating its American origins and its transatlantic crossing into Europe within broader structural changes in society and politics. We then zoom into legal academia and demonstrate how the rise of ELS has been undergirded by a two-front politics of institutional change. The first battle was waged in the arena of disciplinary politics: ELS sought to correct a perceived ideational and formalist bias within law faculties via a more realistic jurisprudence and by transplanting quantitative methodologies deployed by social scientists. As proponents of ELS faced resistances from colleagues, they embraced a strategy of institutional change centered on creating autonomous ELS journals, conferences, and centers that would project influence back into law facilities. The second battle was waged in the arena of knowledge politics: ELS embraced a conception of the 'empirical' as quantifiable data lending itself to statistical analyses responsive to evolving social and market needs. In so doing, ELS dissociated quantitative methodologies from the social science theories promoting their development and discounted qualitative approaches that could also advance the empirical study of law. Hence despite notable successes, ELS's disciplinary and knowledge politics also produced unintended consequences leading to some self-estrangement from both law faculties and the social sciences.

AB - This chapter conducts a political history of empirical legal studies (ELS). We begin by locating its American origins and its transatlantic crossing into Europe within broader structural changes in society and politics. We then zoom into legal academia and demonstrate how the rise of ELS has been undergirded by a two-front politics of institutional change. The first battle was waged in the arena of disciplinary politics: ELS sought to correct a perceived ideational and formalist bias within law faculties via a more realistic jurisprudence and by transplanting quantitative methodologies deployed by social scientists. As proponents of ELS faced resistances from colleagues, they embraced a strategy of institutional change centered on creating autonomous ELS journals, conferences, and centers that would project influence back into law facilities. The second battle was waged in the arena of knowledge politics: ELS embraced a conception of the 'empirical' as quantifiable data lending itself to statistical analyses responsive to evolving social and market needs. In so doing, ELS dissociated quantitative methodologies from the social science theories promoting their development and discounted qualitative approaches that could also advance the empirical study of law. Hence despite notable successes, ELS's disciplinary and knowledge politics also produced unintended consequences leading to some self-estrangement from both law faculties and the social sciences.

U2 - 10.4337/9781802201192.00013

DO - 10.4337/9781802201192.00013

M3 - Book chapter

AN - SCOPUS:85137610249

SN - 9781802201185

SP - 78

EP - 93

BT - The Politics of European Legal Research

A2 - Barti, Marija

A2 - C. Lawrence, Jessica

PB - Edward Elgar Publishing

ER -

ID: 346535575