In 1983 Harvard law professor Duncan Kennedy self-published a biting
critique of the law school system called Legal Education and the
Reproduction of Hierarchy. This controversial booklet was reviewed in
several major law journals--unprecedented for a self-published work--and
influenced a generation of law students and teachers.
In this well-known critique, Duncan Kennedy argues that legal education
reinforces class, race, and gender inequality in our society. However,
Kennedy proposes a radical egalitarian alternative vision of what legal
education should become, and a strategy, starting from the anarchist
idea of workplace organizing, for struggle in that direction. Legal
Education and the Reproduction of Hierarchy is comprehensive, covering
everything about law school from the first day to moot court to job
placement to life after law school. Kennedy's book remains one of the
most cited works on American legal education.
The visually striking original text is reprinted here, making it
available to a new generation. The text is buttressed by commentaries by
five prominent legal scholars who consider its meaning for today, as
well as by an introduction and afterword by the author that describes
the context in which Kennedy wrote the book, including a brief history
of critical legal studies.