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OverviewThis volume contributes to the growing field of comparative Jewish and American law, presenting twenty-six essays characterized by a number of distinct features. The essays will appeal to legal scholars and, at the same time, will be accessible and of interest to a more general audience of intellectually curious readers. These contributions are faithful to Jewish law on its own terms, while applying comparative methods to offer fresh perspectives on complex issues in the Jewish legal system. Through careful comparative analysis, the essays also turn to Jewish law to provide insights into substantive and conceptual areas of the American legal system, particularly areas of American law that are complex, controversial, and unsettled. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Samuel J. LevinePublisher: Academic Studies Press Imprint: Academic Studies Press Weight: 0.333kg ISBN: 9781644694626ISBN 10: 164469462 Pages: 238 Publication Date: 13 August 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsSection Six. Law and Narrative 17. Halacha and Aggada: Translating Robert Cover's Nomos and Narrative 18. Professionalism without Parochialism: Julius Henry Cohen, Rabbi Nachman of Breslov, and the Stories of Two Sons Section Seven. Legal History 19. Lost in Translation: The Strange Journey of an Anti-Semitic Fabrication, from a Late Nineteenth Century Russian Newspaper to an Irish Legal Journal to a Leading Twentieth Century American Criminal Law Textbook 20. Louis Marshall, Julius Henry Cohen, Benjamin Cardozo, and the New York Emergency Rent Laws of 1920: A Case Study in the Role of Jewish Lawyers and Jewish Law in Early Twentieth-Century Public Interest Litigation 21. Jewish Law from out of the Depths: Tragic Choices in the Holocaust 22. Untold Stories of Goldman v. Weinberger: Religious Freedom Confronts Military Uniformity 23. Richard Posner Meets Reb Chaim of Brisk: A Comparative Study in the Founding of Intellectual Legal Movements Section Eight. Law and Public Policy 24. Reflections on Responsibilities in the Public Square through a Perspective of Jewish Tradition: A Brief Biblical Survey 25. Looking beyond the Mercy/Justice Dichotomy: Reflections on the Complementary Roles of Mercy and Justice in Jewish Law and Tradition 26. Teshuva: A Look at Repentance, Forgiveness, and Atonement in Jewish Law and Philosophy and American Legal Thought IndexReviewsLevine's recently published two-volume work, Jewish Law and American Law: Comparative Study, is primarily a collection of his impressive contributions to the Jewish comparative project over the past three decades. A quick perusal of the two volumes serves as a ready reminder of why Levine has long been one of the academics central to Jewish law's rise in the American legal academy. Covering his wide range of Jewish law writings, the two volumes traverse significant legal terrain, focusing on the areas of Levine's primary scholarly emphasis...For those interested in both Jewish law in particular, and religious law in general, [Jewish Law and American Law] serve[s]as [an] extraordinary exploration within the Jewish comparative law project. -Michael A. Helfand, American Journal of Comparative Law, Vol. 67 No. 1 Samuel Levine's two-volume book, Jewish Law and American Law: A Comparative Study, makes an important contribution to comparative law studies of criminal and constitutional law (volume 1), and analyses of law and narrative, legal history and law and public policy (volume 2). Lawyers, law students, and scholars of the legal profession are likely to be particularly interested in Section Five of volume 1, consisting of five chapters comparing the Jewish and U.S. legal systems. In a concise and enlightening fashion, Professor Levine explores numerous legal profession topics, offering contextual insights and raising ideas for future analysis. -Eli Wald, JOTWELL The recent two volume anthology of Professor Samuel J. Levine's essays, articles and lectures on the intersection of Jewish and American Law, entitled Jewish Law and American Law: A Comparative Study, rewards readers with a penetrating insight into Professor Levine's rich body of comparative legal scholarship...[Jewish Law and American Law] reveals a lifetime of scholarship impossible to satisfactorily distill or summarize thoroughly for potential readers. However, its introduction to key concepts in Jewish Law and its capacity to bring those concepts into conversation with substantive topics in American Constitutional Law and professional ethics, rewards the reader with insights into a legal tradition which is both deeply imbricated in the American one and a principled alternative to it. -Jeffrey B. Meyers, Thompson Rivers University, Global Journal of Comparative Law Jewish Law and American Law: A Comparative Study collects twenty-six essays by Samuel J. Levine...on an impressive array of topics that fall under the broad headings of the Jewish and American legal traditions and, frequently, the interrelationship between the two. Each chapter displays Levine's mastery of both legal corpora, through clear arguments and copious documentation of primary sources and secondary literature in both Jewish and American law...Readers will find that these illuminating essays provide an in-depth account of the issues at hand. -Marc Herman, H-Judaic Levine's work as a whole is laudable for the way in which he takes up the comparative task...Levine's essays are fully accessible to readers who have no prior knowledge of Jewish law, yet he also does not attempt to translate complex terms into comparative American language or modes of thought that would obscure the complexity of the ideas behind them...The book is well worth having on the bookshelf of anyone who wants to think about what we can learn from Jewish law, the ethos of Jewish life, or religious legal systems generally, that make our study of our own secular legal systems and culture more incisive and critical. -Marie A. Failinger, Mitchell Hamline School of Law, Touro Law Review Author InformationSamuel J. Levine is Professor of Law and Director of the Jewish Law Institute at Touro Law Center. He has also served as the Beznos Distinguished Professor at Michigan State University College of Law, and he has taught at the law schools at Bar-Ilan, Fordham, Pepperdine, and St. John’s Universities. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |