SOCIOLOGY 380, Section 1

Fall, 2003

Sociology of Law

In order to assist you in your mastery of the material for this course, the following is a listing of some of the most significant terms and individuals which figure into the Sociology of Law. This list is NOT exhaustive. It should, however, assist you in studying for exams and in organizing your thinking about the many issues, schools of thought and concepts which we shall be covering during the semester.

SIGNIFICANT TERMS

absolute monarch

abuse of process

administrative law

alienation

American Civil War

amicus curiae

anti-nomianism

arbitrator

arraignment

arrest

attorney

authoritarianism

authority

bailiff

balance of powers

bar association

barrister

bureaucracy

canon law

capitalism

casebook

charisma

civil commitment

civil law

civil procedure

civil rights

class

code

command

common law

communism

community

complaint

conflict

congress

consensus

constitution

continental law

contract

court

court of original

court of appeals

court of equity

court of law

criminal law

criminal procedure

critical legal theory

culture

custom

decree

defendant

demurrer

deposition

despot

desuetude

dialectical materialism

dictatorship

discovery

double jeopardy

due process

English Civil War

equal protection

estate

evidence

ex post facto

experimental methods

fascist

federalism

felony

feminism

fiat

fiduciary

folkways

formal law

freedom

functionalism

Gemeinschaft

Gesellschaft

government

habeas corpus

hearing

idealism

ideology

indictment

injunction

insanity

interpretation

interrogatory

“iron cage”

“iron law of oligarchy”

irrational procedures

judge

judicial review

judiciary

jurisdiction

jurisprudence

jury

justice

Koran

latent functions

law

law firm

legal

legislation

legislature

legitimacy

liberty

license

licit

litigation

litigious

lobbyist

M’Naghten Rule

magistrate

Magna Charta

manifest functions

Marxism

materialism

methods

misdemeanor

mores

natural law

nominalism

norms

order

parliament

participant observation

plaintiff

pleadings

police

policy

positive law

positivism

precedent

private law

private practice

privilege

profession

professionalization

property

prosecution

public law

qualitative methods

quantitative methods

questionnaire

racism

rational procedures

realism

regulations

repressive

res judicata

response

restitutive

revolution

right

role

Roman law

rules

sanctions

sentence

Shari’a

social justice

socialism

socialization

society

solicitor

solo practitioner

sovereignty

stare decisis

states’ rights

status

statute

statute of limitations

stratification

strict construction

substantive law

Supreme Court

survey

symbolic interaction

Talmud

Ten Commandments

tort

totalitarianism

tradition

trial

tyranny

ukase

values

verdict

verstehen

victimless crimes

voir dire

wergild

white collar crime

SIGNIFICANT FIGURES

Peter Abelard

St. Thomas Aquinas

Aristotle

Cesare Beccaria

Blackstone

Robert Bork

Louis Brandeis

Benjamin Cardozo

Catherine of Aragon

Coke

Auguste Comte

Confucius

Oliver Cromwell

Ronald Dworkin

Emile Durkheim

Queen Elizabeth I

Frederich Engels

Heinz Eulau

Michel Foucault

Lon Fuller

Marc Galanter

Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Mary Ann Glendon

Hammurabi

H.L.A. Hart

Henry VIII

Thomas Hobbes

Oliver Wendell Holmes

John Jay

Thomas Jefferson

Jesus Christ

Justinian

Immanuel Kant

Hans Kelsen

William Kunstler

Cesare Lombroso

Catherine MacKinnon

James Madison

Sir Henry Maine

Bronislaw Malinowski

John Marshall

Thurgood Marshall

Karl Marx

Robert Merton

Mohammed

Baron de Montesquieu

Moses

Laura Nader

Sandra Day O’Connor

Talcott Parsons

Plato

Roscoe Pound

John Rawls

Jean Jacques Rousseau

Friedrich Savigny

Adam Smith

Socrates

Theodora

Clarence Thomas

Nicholas Timasheff

Lawrence Tribe

Austin Turk

Roberto Mangabeira Unger

Earl Warren

George Washington

Max Weber

______

______

______

______