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The sociology of law is often distinguished from sociological jurisprudence.
Two years later he began teaching sociological jurisprudence at the University of Petrograd.
He is considered to be a pioneer in the area of sociology of law and sociological jurisprudence.
Brandeis deeply antagonized the nation's conservative legal establishment with his advocacy of "sociological jurisprudence."
One commentator argued that Sanhuri's code reflected a "hodgepodge of socialist doctrine and sociological jurisprudence."
"Sociology of Law and Sociological Jurisprudence."
Roscoe Pound, former dean of Harvard Law School, founder of the movement for "sociological jurisprudence"
Its intellectual antecedents lie in sociological jurisprudence of Roscoe Pound and the reformist ambitions of the American Legal Realists.
Banakar, R. (2006) "Sociological Jurisprudence" in Encyclopedia of Law and Society: American and Global Perspectives.
Some writing of Jennings, for example, seems more in tune with Pound's sociological jurisprudence, which views social interests rather than legal rules and principles as the building blocks of the legal order.
Roscoe Pound also made a significant contribution to jurisprudence in the tradition of sociological jurisprudence, which emphasized on the importance of social relationships in the development of law and vice versa.
Sociological jurisprudence seeks to base legal arguments on sociological insights and, unlike legal theory, is concerned with the mundane practices that create legal institutions and social operations which reproduce legal systems over time.
His appointment cheered younger faculty who hoped he might shake the place up, while infuriating others who had drawn his sarcasm at faculty meetings or at legal conferences, where he championed the new theories of legal realism and sociological jurisprudence in the face of entrenched opposition to both.