1st Edition

The Demise of the Reasonable Man A Cross-Cultural Study of a Legal Concept

By Michael Saltman Copyright 1991
    177 Pages
    by Routledge

    175 Pages
    by Routledge

    Judges in most societies often resort to resolving disputes by means of applying a criterion of reasonableness. In The Demise of the'Reasonable Man' Michael Saltman explores the ways in which reasonableness varies from one legal culture to another, defined by the relative presence or absence of centralized political power.

    In non-politically centralized societies, Saltman says, judges seek meanings underlying human behavior, and try to place reasonableness within a societal and cultural context. This is possible because primitive societies are relatively homogenous in their values and tend towards consensus when determining what constitutes reasonable behavior. In contrast, modern judges resort to standards of reasonableness only when the legal standard is unclear. Saltman contrasts judges in politically centralized societies, who, in the absence of such consensus, have the authority to determine, on the basis of that authority, what constitutes reasonableness. This rich volume references case studies drawn from ethnographic fieldwork, historical sources, and law reports to demonstrate differences in judicial attitudes toward reasonableness.

    1. Introduction 2. Norms as a Function of the Judicial Process: The Ethnographic Data 3. Scandinavian and American Legal Realism: Measures of Reasonableness? 4. Shared Understandings, Reasonableness, and Intentional Societies 5. Reasonableness in a Modern Legal System 6. Conclusion References Index

    Biography

    Michael Saltman