Law in Contemporary Society

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RyRavenholtIntro 5 - 05 Feb 2015 - Main.RyRavenholt
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Personal Introduction

I have always viewed the law from a position of disdain and criticism. My sojourn into law school is driven by my distaste of criticism of any institution, apparatus, or ideology taken from a position of naiveté and ignorance about the nature and internal logic of that structure.

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Law school for me is a chance to understand the internal spaces of law, to determine if its cogs and levers push the behemoth without falter in the direction I fear , and if so to decide if our legal institutions are more susceptible to internal subversion, or external resistance.

Too purple, which is why you lost control of the grammar and wrote "falter" instead of "faltering." Unless "external resistance" means "criminal activity" the distinction between inside and outside, like most such distinctions, is less than meets the eye.

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Law school for me is a chance to understand the internal spaces of law, an opportunity to test its assumptions and my own. By grappling with the law I hope to find some means of achieving alternatives to its dominance, or at least some hope in the eventual purification of its purpose.
 

-- By RyRavenholt - 28 Jan 2015 \ No newline at end of file


Revision 5r5 - 05 Feb 2015 - 06:02:59 - RyRavenholt
Revision 4r4 - 04 Feb 2015 - 15:17:05 - EbenMoglen
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