March 15, 2024

Rabban on Jhering's Influence on American Legal Thought @UTexasLaw

David M. Rabban, University of Texas School of Law, is publishing Jhering's Influence on American Legal Thought in Jhering Global (Stephan Meder and Christoph-Eric Mecke, eds., V&R unipress, 2023). Here is the abstract.
This article was published as a chapter in Jhering Global, edited by Stephan Meder and Christoph-Eric Mecke (V&R unipress 2023), a collection of essays about Jhering and his influence throughout the world. Before 1900, Jhering was a well-known model for American legal scholars, some of whom had studied law in Germany, including with Jhering himself. The most enduring work of legal scholarship ever written by an American, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.’s The Common Law, published in 1881, reflects Jhering’s substantial influence, though Holmes himself often did not acknowledge it. Roscoe Pound, whose development of sociological jurisprudence before World War I trans- formed American legal scholarship, graciously and repeatedly indicated how much his own major themes derived from Jhering. Legal realists of the next generation saw themselves as extending Pound’s sociological jurisprudence, recognized its roots in Jhering, and memorably invoked Jhering himself. Eminent German law professors who emigrated to the United States as refugees from Nazi Germany in the 1930s applied Jhering’s ideas to scholarly and judicial developments in the United States. Though citations of Jhering by American scholars have continued at a relatively constant rate since World War II, most occur while assessing his influence on previous American scholars rather than as a living source for current legal analysis. Many of the recent scholars who cite Jhering, in contrast to their predecessors who often knew German, are only able to read him in translation. My strong impression is that most American legal scholars today have never even heard of Jhering. An important influence on American legal thought in the past, he is now largely unknown.


The essay is not available for download from SSRN.  

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