ABSTRACT

The innovative and revolutionary scholarship of the eminent Austrian legal theorist and professor of Roman law, Eugen Ehrlich (1862-1922), is of a very high caliber. His work has not only held its place well in view of what legal theory, especially sociological legal theory, has to offer, but is also still a powerful challenge to positions in legal theory that are no longer defensible. The sociology of law has followed in a direct line of succession from Ehrlich's observations and ideas as a new and special discipline linking jurisprudence with sociology.

chapter I|23 pages

THE PRACTICAL CONCEPT OF LAW

chapter II|13 pages

THE INNER ORDER OF THE SOCIAL ASSOCIATIONS

chapter III|22 pages

THE SOCIAL ASSOCIATIONS AND THE SOCIAL NORMS

chapter IV|22 pages

SOCIAL AND STATE SANCTION OF THE NORMS

chapter V|38 pages

THE FACTS OF THE LAW

chapter VI|16 pages

THE NORMS FOR DECISION

chapter VII|34 pages

THE STATE AND THE LAW

chapter VIII|21 pages

THE CREATION OF THE LEGAL PROPOSITION

chapter IX|22 pages

THE STRUCTURE OF THE LEGAL PROPOSITION

chapter XI|26 pages

JURISTIC SCIENCE IN ROME

chapter XII|26 pages

JURISTIC SCIENCE IN ENGLAND

chapter XV|25 pages

THE FUNCTION OF JURISTIC SCIENCE

chapter XVI|25 pages

THE LAW CREATED BY THE STATE

chapter XVII|21 pages

CHANGES IN THE LAW I N THE STATE AND IN SOCIETY

chapter XVIII|24 pages

THE CODIFICATION OF JURISTIC LAW

chapter XIX|36 pages

THE THEORY OF CUSTOMARY LAW