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Building Capacity for Empirical Legal Research: Some questions about the links between methods and subjects. Sharon Witherspoon Deputy Director. The Nuffield Foundation. Founded in 1943 Concerned initially with science and the then new field of academic social sciences
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Building Capacity for Empirical Legal Research:Some questions about the links between methods and subjects Sharon Witherspoon Deputy Director
The Nuffield Foundation • Founded in 1943 • Concerned initially with science and the then new field of academic social sciences • Investment in infrastructure, including human capital
Nuffield Inquiry into Empirical Research in Law • Foundation’s long-standing interest in law and legal research, from the beginning but particularly from late 1960s • Inquiry started in 2005 • Involved • Academics: both academic lawyers and non-lawyers • Policy makers • Strategic practitioners: judges, lawyers, court managers • Both civil law (administrative law, family law, etc) and criminal law
Diagnosis and Understanding • Is there a problem? • Why does it matter? • What are the causes? • What are the solutions?
What is the problem? • Reducing capacity to undertake empirical research on law (ERL) • Cohort of experienced researchers will retire in next decade • Sparse new generation • Discipline under threat
What are the causes? • Law in the academy: • Professional training • Legal scholarship / ‘legal reasoning’ • Absence of critical mass • Social science • General decline in empirical research? • General decline in quantitative training? • Political science and sociology less ‘institutional’ (than elsewhere?) • Decline of interest in power and social structural forces (as against ‘culture’) • Apprehension about technicality of law • General problems: • RAE and its effects on incentives • Inter-disciplinary work (also RAE)
What are the solutions? • No quick fix: ‘market failure’ • Sustained interventions at various points: • Undergraduate course materials for law and social sciences • Summer schools, master’s cross-disciplinary training • Post-graduate and PhD • CRUCIAL: links between methods and substantive issues • Hence, centres doing substantive research
Reasons for choosing to link methods and substance: • Methods innovation linked to exciting intellectual questions • Normative questions of law linked to empirical questions of ‘what is’ • Different disciplines attracted • Economics: behaviours and counterfactuals • Psychology: motivations, experiments • Politics and Sociology: linking structures and individual actions and decisions • Linking cutting edge substantive issues with TRAINING • Cross-disciplinary (law and social sciences) • Critical mass younger people: Masters, PhDs, Post-docs
Preponderance of doctrinal legal research Undergraduates Taught doctrinal research and limited exposure to empirical work Appointment & Mid-career Teaching core subjects Continue pattern of doctrinal research Postgraduates Doctrinal or theoretical work. No training in empirical methods. Shortage of supervisors to deal with empirical projects. Most exit topractice and never return Seniorpractitioners andjudiciary Model of Legal Education and ScholarshipWhere to break in?