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Digging a Hole: The Legal Theory Podcast
Digging a Hole Podcast
73 episodes
1 week ago
Yale Law School professors Samuel Moyn and David Schleicher interview legal scholars and dig into the debates heard inside law school halls.
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Social Sciences
Science
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Yale Law School professors Samuel Moyn and David Schleicher interview legal scholars and dig into the debates heard inside law school halls.
Show more...
Social Sciences
Science
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Kunal Parker
Digging a Hole: The Legal Theory Podcast
56 minutes 44 seconds
1 year ago
Kunal Parker

Dear listeners, this season has been riveting, and it’s been a little controversial. Some of you have written in (if you listen to this episode, you’ll see we’ve graced certain aggrieved parties with a response). We see you, we hear you, and boy, do we have a classic legal theory podcast for you. Today’s guest is Kunal Parker, Professor and Dean's Distinguished Scholar at the University of Miami School of Law, here to talk about his fabulous new book The Turn to Process: American Legal, Political, and Economic Thought, 1870–1970. If you liked his first book–and if you didn’t, you’re probably a wretched anti-foundationalist–you’ll love this spiritual sequel. 

We begin by asking Parker to lay out his thesis, which is, surprise, surprise, that there was a turn from substance to process in economic, political, and most saliently for us, legal thought in the twentieth century. Next, we discuss how much the phenomenon Parker describes is its own thing versus concomitant with American pragmatism and the disciplinification of the modern research university. We make sure everything gets filtered through big important legal thinkers–Holmes and Fortas, Frankfurter and Bickel–before turning to today’s neo-formalistic approaches to the law: neo-Aristotelians, the new private law theorists, et al. (and if we’ve missed anyone, we can guarantee that our listeners will let us know).

This podcast is generously supported by Themis Bar Review.

Referenced Readings

  • “Radical Mismatch” by Stephen Holmes

  • Rules for the Direction of the Mind by René Descartes

  • “Mr. Justice Black and the Living Constitution” by Charles Reich

  • Tocqueville's Nightmare: The Administrative State Emerges in America, 1900-1940 by Daniel Ernst

  • On Democracy by Robert Dahl

  • The Public and its Problems by John Dewey

  • Age of Fracture by Daniel Rodgers

Digging a Hole: The Legal Theory Podcast
Yale Law School professors Samuel Moyn and David Schleicher interview legal scholars and dig into the debates heard inside law school halls.