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#1 (permalink) |
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Eager!
![]() Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 37
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Law Schools with radical, or "heterodox," programs
Hello, I am searching for Law Schools with heterodox law programs.
For example, most economic grad programs today run the students through a conventional track teaching Neoclassical (or "Neoliberal") economics. But a number of schools have heterodox programs (meaning radical, non-mainstream) that study economics from a whole range of viewpoints, like Keynesianism (President Franklin Roosevelt's policies), Marxism, and others! American University Notre Dame University of Massachusetts University of Vermont The full list is at: http://www.open.ac.uk/socialsciences...on/schools.htm http://www.csbsju.edu/economics/Care...20Programs.htm It would be exciting to study Law from a radical perspective too! A radical law program might talk about how corporate lobbying groups almost make our laws, or the contradiction between real democracy and democracy "as it is," where people might want things one way, but the government will still decide against their interests. Or how should a lawyer who believes in the public interest act differently than lawyers for corporate interests? Is it more important to choose a winnable case, or to take a stand on a losing, but vital issue? There is a list of heterodox economic schools, but how about heterodox law schools? |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Trying to make mom and pop proud
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 11
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This post, while well-intentioned, is slightly moronic. You would feel right at home in most law schools, as most professors would sympathize with your perspective, but that's not really what learning law is about. Once you actually understand law, you can worry about who's pushing for what interests. Just go to the best law school you can get into. You won't have trouble finding professors there who share your perspective, and you can work with them after your first year. There's an entire branch called "critical legal studies" with radical/unorthodox professors of law. It's not as radical as heterodox economics versus regular economics, but they basically share the viewpoint you just described.
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#6 (permalink) |
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Within my grasp!
![]() ![]() Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: MA
Posts: 171
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Rokovsky, good luck finding your ideal school. Law appears to be geared largely toward precedents and less so towards varied ideas. You might get more of what you want during the last year, but the others will be full of tedious details and broad overviews of topics. I don't know if you'll find this helpful or not, but you may want to seriously consider a dual major. I know it's a lot of work, but a masters in government or some particular interest of yours may give you the combination you want. Remember too that law is one of those fields that almost requires you to attend a top institution for many of the best jobs, but your direction may be different enough that it won't matter for you. Good luck. Oh yeah, it takes a lot to scare a green skeleton.
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#7 (permalink) |
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Trying to make mom and pop proud
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 4
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The Brazilian Journal of Political Economy will give priority to papers on political economy, while continuing to publish applied papers containing relevant analysis of the Brazilian economy and its international insertion. Political economy is here broadly understood as the analysis relating the economy with the state. The Journal maintains its pluralistic character, and so it will host a diversified range of ideological orientations, from institutionalist and public choice, to Keynesian, Schumpeterian, and structuralist approaches. The contributions, however, are expected to focus in the intersection between state and the market. Besides purely theoretical papers, the ones on the Brazilian economy and the Brazilian state, papers adopting a more general approach on Latin America and the world political economy will be fit for publication in the Journal.
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