Legal Realism flourished during the 1920s and 1940s, primarily centered at these two elite law schools.
Columbia and Yale Law Schools
Both the American and Scandinavian branches of realism depend upon this type of worldview, where reality is presumed to be as the sciences describe it.
A naturalistic worldview?
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. famously argued that the "life of the law" has not been logic, but rather this.
Experience
Realists define justice as a practical, social outcome determined by judges based on policy and specific facts, rather than this type of objective truth.
Universal or objective justice
Who are the major proponents of Legal Realism? (Name 3)
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., Jerome Frank, Karl Llewellyn, Roscoe Pound, Herman Oliphant, Stewart Macaulay, Elizabeth Mertz, and Axel Hägerström.
While formalists see rules as clear and consistent, realists see them as?
Multiple interpretations are possible and used to hide policy choices. (Indeterminate tools)
This philosopher created a famous distinction between "paper rules" (formal doctrine) and "real rules" (how courts actually behave).
Who is Karl Llewellyn?
In the context of the death penalty, realists highlight that sentencing varies based on these three factors rather than the mechanical application of a rule.
Class, race, and prosecutorial discretion
Realism emerged as a reaction against this theory, challenging the idea that judges apply rules mechanically and seeking to move from "law on the books" to "law in action".
Legal Formalism
What is a selective tool?
Realists view precedent not as a binding command, but as something judges use or ignore based on social needs and situational sense.
Jerome Frank emphasized psychological factors, claiming that the "certainty of law" is an illusion devised to soothe people's anxiety about these.
What are unpredictable outcomes?
“The certainty of law is largely an illusion devised to soothe people’s anxiety about unpredictable outcomes.” - Jerome Frank
When analyzing protests or abortion, realists focus on the "gap" between neutral justice and arbitrary practice, arguing legality is shaped by these two factors.
Power and Context