Defining and describing what we do : doctrinal legal research


Autoria(s): Hutchinson, Terry C.; Duncan, Nigel
Data(s)

01/11/2012

Resumo

The practitioner lawyer of the past had little need to reflect on process. The doctrinal research methodology developed intuitively within the common law — a research method at the core of practice. There was no need to justify or classify it within a broader research framework. Modern academic lawyers are facing a different situation. At a time when competition for limited research funds is becoming more intense, and in which interdisciplinary work is highly valued and non-lawyers are involved in the assessment of grant applications, lawyer-applicants who engage in doctrinal research need to be able to explain their methodology more clearly. Doctrinal scholars need to be more open and articulate about their methods. These methods may be different in different contexts. This paper examines the doctrinal method used in legal research and its place in recent research dialogue. Some commentators are of the view that the doctrinal method is simply scholarship rather than a separate research methodology. Richard Posner even suggests that law is ‘not a field with a distinct methodology, but an amalgam of applied logic, rhetoric, economics and familiarity with a specialized vocabulary and a particular body of texts, practices, and institutions ...’.1 Therefore, academic lawyers are beginning to realise that the doctrinal research methodology needs clarification for those outside the legal profession and that a discussion about the standing and place of doctrinal research compared to other methodologies is required.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/54819/

Publicador

Deakin University. School of Law

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/54819/2/54801.pdf

http://www.deakin.edu.au/buslaw/law/dlr/current.php

Hutchinson, Terry C. & Duncan, Nigel (2012) Defining and describing what we do : doctrinal legal research. Deakin Law Review, 17(1), pp. 83-119.

Direitos

Copyright 2012 Deakin University. School of Law

Fonte

Faculty of Law; School of Law

Palavras-Chave #180199 Law not elsewhere classified #doctrinal research #legal research #research methodologies #competitive research funding #HDR training
Tipo

Journal Article