In a context of changing times and current debate, this highly topical
book discusses the aims, methods and organization of legal scholarship.
Jan Smits assesses the recent turn away from doctrinal research towards
a more empirical and theoretical way of legal investigation and offers a
fresh perspective on what it is that legal academics should deal with
and how they should do it. The book also considers the consequences
which follow for the organization of the legal discipline by
universities and uses this context to discuss the key questions of the
internationalization of law schools, quality assessments, legal
education and the research culture. Being the first book to address the
aim and goals of legal scholarship in an international context, this
insightful study will appeal to academics, graduate students,
researchers and policymakers in higher education.