About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

41 San Diego L. Rev. 1741 (2004)
Why Do Empirical Legal Scholarship

handle is hein.journals/sanlr41 and id is 1753 raw text is: Why Do Empirical Legal Scholarship?
THEODORE EISENBERG*
People conduct legal scholarship for many different reasons. This
Article focuses on the demand for and reaction to scholarship that helps
inform litigants, policymakers, and society as a whole about how the
legal system works. Law schools do little to train generations of lawyers
in how to systematically assess the state of the legal system and the legal
system's performance. Schools leave such assessments largely to self-
interested advocates and to other disciplines. Self-interested advocates
have less interest in objective assessment of the system than in pushing
preferred policy agendas. Academic disciplines other than law have a
distinct advantage in that some of them have trained many of their
members in the methodologies needed to assess law-related programs.
But nonlawyers have the distinct disadvantage of often not understanding
legal doctrine or the state of the law. This sometimes leads to blunders
that compromise empirical analyses. The need for legally sophisticated
empirical analysts is clear.
I. EVIDENCE OF GROWTH IN EMPIRICAL LEGAL STUDIES
It is not that we lack calls for law-trained experts to do more empirical
legal scholarship. Scholars have long commented on the relative paucity
of empirical work by law professors.' But any establishment moves
*  Henry Allen Mark Professor of Law, Cornell University.
1. See generally Robert C. Ellickson, The Case for Coase and Against
Coaseanism , 99 YALE L.J. 611 (1989); Michael Heise, The Importance of Being
Empirical, 26 PEPP. L. REV. 807 (1999); Richard K. Neumann, Jr. & Stefan H. Krieger,
Empirical Inquiry Twenty-Five Years After The Lawyering Process, 10 CLINICAL L. REV.
349 (2003); Peter H. Schuck, Why Don't Law Professors Do More Empirical Research?,
39 J. LEGAL EDUC. 323 (1989); Elizabeth Warren, The Market for Data: The Changing

1741

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Short-term subscription options include 24 hours, 48 hours, or 1 week to HeinOnline.

Contact us for annual subscription options:

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most