Schools for Misrule: Legal Academia and an Overlawyered America

$25.95

By Walter Olson

This new book reveals how our nation’s law schools have become a hatchery of bad ideas, many of which confer power and status on the schools' graduates and faculty, as law comes to pervade more areas of life.

About the Book

From Barack Obama (Harvard and Chicago) to Bill and Hillary Clinton (Yale), many of our current national leaders emerged from the rarefied air of the nation's top law schools. The ideas taught there in one generation often shape national policy in the next.

The trouble is our elite law schools keep churning out ideas that are catastrophically bad for America. From class action lawsuits that promote the right to sue anyone over anything, to court orders mandating the mass release of prison inmates; from the movement for slavery reparations, to court takeovers of school funding - all of these appalling ideas were hatched in legal academia. And the worst is yet to come. A fast-rising movement in law schools demands that sovereignty over U.S. legal disputes be handed over to international law and transnational courts.

It is not by coincidence, Olson argues, that these bad ideas all tend to confer more power on the law schools' own graduates. In the overlawyered society that results, they are the ones who become the real rulers.

Listen to the author discuss his book

About the Author

Walter Olson is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute's Center for Constitutional Studies. Prior to joining Cato, Olson was a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, and has been a columnist for Great Britain's Times Online as well as Reason. His writing appears regularly in such publications as the Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and the New York Post. He has appeared numerous times before Congress and advised many public officials.

Catch the author during his nation-wide book tour.

Publication Date: 
March 1, 2011
ISBN: 
9781594032332
Number of Pages: 
284

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What Others Have Said

"American law schools wield more social influence than any other part of the American university. In Schools for Misrule, Walter Olson offers a fine dissection of these strangely powerful institutions."
--Wall Street Journal

"Law schools are a hatchery of bad, anti-free-market ideas. These self-dealing professors idealize litigation and impress upon their students a taste for centralized power, thereby strangling our freedom and American entrepreneurship. Olson shines a light on their destructive social engineering."
--John Stossel, Emmy award-winning consumer reporter and investigative journalist; host of "Stossel" (FOX Business Network)

"While the public loves to bash lawyers, judges, and politicians, law professors have escaped all blame. Olson provides the inside story of how progressive political ideology became the reigning orthodoxy of elite legal education, providing the legal theories responsible for an overweening government committed to mandating, prohibiting, or regulating every aspect of American life in the "public interest." I wish I could say he exaggerates but, sadly, the legal foundation of the road to serfdom was devised by law professors."
--Randy E. Barnett, Carmack Waterhouse Professor of Legal Theory, Georgetown Law Center; author of Restoring the Lost Constitution: The Presumption of Liberty

"Every year I hire as law clerks some of the best and brightest law students in the country, and spend a year wringing out of them all the wrong-headed ideas their law professors taught them. Now I know why."
--Chief Judge Alex Kozinski, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

"This hard-hitting, witty account reveals the effect of law on the individual and the collective and astutely forecasts the future of law reform, in the academy, in politics, and across the globe."
--Publishers Weekly

"With clear and compelling stories, Walter Olson unfolds a morality play of what happens when law goes too far. Schools for Misrule is an important critique of how social policy litigation has corroded democracy and contributed to public polarization and the fiscal crisis."
--Philip K. Howard, author, The Death of Common Sense; founder, Common Good

$25.95