ABSTRACT

The exiled Russian sociologist and legal scholar Nicholas S. Timasheff's place in the forefront of the sociology of law was established with the publication, in 1939, of An Introduction to the Sociology of Law. His magnum opus articulates a systematic legal sociology. The book's title is misleading, giving the false impression that the volume is merely a textbook intended for classroom use. It is much more than this. An Introduction to the Sociology of Law is a sophisticated treatise that explains, precisely and methodically, the law as a social force. It makes two fundamental points: law can, indeed must, be studied by sociology, and law is a combination of socio-ethical and imperative coordination of human behavior.

part I|64 pages

Sociology and Law

chapter I|16 pages

The Sociological Place of Law

chapter II|25 pages

The Place of the Sociology of Law in Science

part II|104 pages

Ethics

chapter IV|18 pages

The Ethical Group-Conviction

chapter V|27 pages

Socio-Ethical Equilibrium

chapter VI|23 pages

Changes in Ethics

chapter VII|33 pages

Differentiation of Ethics

part III|74 pages

Power

chapter VIII|23 pages

Power Equilibrium

chapter IX|28 pages

Differentiation and Integration of Power

chapter X|21 pages

Changes in Power

part IV|138 pages

Law

chapter XI|28 pages

Legal Equilibrium

chapter XII|28 pages

Changes in Law

chapter XIII|25 pages

Differentiation and Integration of Law

chapter XIV|28 pages

The Integration of Law in Culture

chapter XVI|14 pages

The Vindication of Law