Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T09:18:46.592Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Thinking Disputes: An Essay on the Origins of the Dispute Industry

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2024

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

The paper identifies five presumptions of dispute theorizing: universality, ideological functionalism, settlement by courts, qualitative identity of the parties, and comparability. It is argued that these presumptions derive from or are related to the methodology of dispute theorizing, which is idealist either in the form of abstracted empiricism or logical deduction. Reasons for the sudden upsurge in dispute theorizing are discussed. Concluding, the authors evaluate attempts by dispute theorists to break away from the presumptions identified, and indicate some empirically limited but theoretically useful possibilities for futher work.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1982 The Law and Society Association.

Footnotes

*

An earlier version of this paper is being published in The Study of Disputes (eds. M. Cain and K. Kulcsar), 1982. It was first presented in September, 1980, at a meeting organized by the Institute of Sociology of Law for Europe and the European Centre for Research and Documentation in the Social Sciences, Vienna, which took place in Copenhagen.

We are grateful to our colleagues in the joint ISLE/Vienna Centre Law and Dispute Treatment (LEG) Project, whose incisive criticisms have encouraged repeated re-appraisal of our ideas. Moreover, without their collaboration over several years, these ideas would not have been generated. The responsibility for these arguments is, however, our own. In addition we express our thanks to Joel Grossman who, in accepting this article, also sent us advance copies of the Special Issue of the Review (Vol. 15, nos. 3-4, 1980-81) so that we could take note of those papers which most closely touched upon our own position. Finally, we thank Richard Abel, David Nelken, and Simon Roberts, who have also commented upon the manuscript.

References

ABEL Richard, L. (1974) “A Comparative Theory of Dispute Institutions in Society,” 8 Law & Society Review 217.Google Scholar
ABEL Richard, L. (1979) “The Rise of Capitalism and the Transformation of Disputing: From Confrontation over Honor to Competition for Property,” 27 UCLA Law Review 223.Google Scholar
ABEL Richard, L. (1981) “Conservative Conflict and the Reproduction of Capitalism: The Role of Informal Justice,” 9 International Journal of the Sociology of Law 245.Google Scholar
AUBERT, Vilhelm (1963) “Competition and Dissensus: Two Types of Conflict and of Conflict Resolution,” 7 Journal of Conflict Resolution 26. Reprinted in V. Aubert, The Hidden Society. Badminton Press, 1965.Google Scholar
AUBERT, Vilhelm (1969) “Law as a Way of Resolving Conflicts: The Case of a Small Industrialised Society,” in Nader, L. (ed.), Law in Culture and Society. Chicago: Aldine.Google Scholar
BANKOWSKI, Zenon and Geoff, MUNGHAM (1976) Images of Law. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
BENDER, Rolf (1979) “The Stuttgart Model,” in Cappelletti, M. and Weisner, J. (eds.), Access to Justice, Vol. II, Book II, Promising Institutions. Hague: Sijthoff.Google Scholar
BIERBRAUER, Günter, Josef, FALKE, and Klaus-Friedrich, KOCH (1978) “Conflict and Its Settlement: An Interdisciplinary Study Concerning the Legal Basis, Function, and Performance of the Institution of the Schiedsmann,” in Cappelletti, M. and Weisner, J. (eds.), Access to Justice, Vol. II, Book I, Promising Institutions. Hague: Sijthoff.Google Scholar
BLACK, Donald J. (1976) The Behavior of Law. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
BLEGVAD, Britt-Marie (1982) “Accessibility and Dispute Treatment: The Case of the Consumer in Denmark,” in Cain, M. and Kulcsar, K. (eds.), The Study of Disputes. London: Pergamon, forthcoming.Google Scholar
BOHANNAN, Paul (1957) Justice and Judgment Among the Tiv. Oxford University Press (republished 1968).Google Scholar
CAIN, Maureen (1980) “The Limits of Idealism: Max Weber and the Sociology of Law,” in Spitzer, S. (ed.), Research on Law and Sociology, Vol. III. Connecticut: Jai Press.Google Scholar
Spitzer, S. (1982) “Where Are the Disputes? A Study of a First Instance Civil Court in the UK,” in Cain, M. and Kulcsar, K. (eds.), The Study of Disputes. London: Pergamon.Google Scholar
CAIN, Maureen and Janet, FINCH (1981) “Towards a Rehabilitation of Data,” in P. Abrams et al. (eds.), Practice and Progress: British Sociology 1950-1980. London: Allen and Unwin. Also available in Transactions of British Sociological Association Annual Conference, 1980.Google Scholar
CAPPELLETTI, Mauro and John, WEISNER (eds.) (1978) Access to Justice, Vol. II, Book I, Promising Institutions. Hague: Sijthoff.Google Scholar
CARCHEDI, Guglielmo (1977) On the Economic Identification of Social Classes. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
COLLIER, Jane (1973) Law and Social Change in Zinacantan. Stanford: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DANZIG, Richard (1973) “Toward the Creation of a Complementary, Decentralized System of Criminal Justice,” 26 Stanford Law Review 1.Google Scholar
DANZIG, Richard and Michael J., LOWY (1975) “Everyday Disputes and Mediation in the United States: A Reply to Professor Felstiner,” 9 Law & Society Review 675.Google Scholar
DURKHEIM, Emile (1964) The Rules of Sociological Method. New York: Free Press.Google Scholar
ECKHOFF, Torstein (1967) “The Mediator, the Judge, and the Administrator in Conflict Resolution,” 10 Acta Sociologica 148.Google Scholar
FALKE, Josef, BIERBRAUER, Günter, and Klaus-Friedrich, KOCH (1978) “Legal Advice and the Non-Judicial Settlement of Disputes: A Case Study of the Public Legal Advice and Mediation Center in the City of Hamburg,” in Cappelletti, M. and Weisner, J. (eds.), Access to Justice, Vol. II, Book I, Promising Institutions. Hague: Sijthoff.Google Scholar
FELSTINER, William L.F. (1974) “Influences of Social Organization on Dispute Processing,” 9 Law & Society Review 63.Google Scholar
FELSTINER, William L.F. (1975) “Avoidance as Dispute Processing: An Elaboration,” 9 Law & Society Review 695.Google Scholar
FELSTINER, William L.F. and Lynne A., WILLIAMS (1980) Community Mediation in Dorchester, Massachusetts. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, National Institute of Justice.Google Scholar
FELSTINER, William L.F., ABEL, Richard L., and Austin, SARAT (1981) “The Emergence and Transformation of Disputes: Naming, Blaming, Claiming …,” 15 Law & Society Review 631.Google Scholar
FRIEDMAN, Lawrence M. (1976) “Trial Courts and their Work in the Modern World,” Jahrbuch fur Rechtssoziologie und Rechtstheorie, Vol. 4. Wiesbaden.Google Scholar
FRIEDMAN, Lawrence M. (1978) “Introduction,” in Cappelletti, M. and Weisner, J. (eds.), Access to Justice, Vol. II, Book I, Promising Institutions. Hague: Sijthoff.Google Scholar
FRIEDMAN, Lawrence M. and Robert V., PERCIVAL (1976) “A Tale of Two Courts: Litigation in Alameda and San Benito Counties,” 10 Law & Society Review 267.Google Scholar
GALANTER, Marc (1974) “Why the ‘Haves’ Come out Ahead: Speculations on The Limits of Legal Change,” 9 Law & Society Review 95.Google Scholar
GESSNER, V. (1982) “Dispute: The Concept and Its Relevance for Legal Sociology,” in Cain, M. and Kulcsar, K. (eds.), The Study of Disputes. London: Pergamon, forthcoming.Google Scholar
GLUCKMAN, Max (1955) The Judicial Process Among the Barotse of Northern Rhodesia. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
GLUCKMAN, Max (1962) “African Jurisprudence,” XVIII Advancement of Science 439.Google Scholar
GOLLOP, Frank and Jeffrey, MARQUARDT (1981) “A Microeconomic Model of Household Choice: The Household as a Disputant,” 15 Law & Society Review 611.Google Scholar
GULLIVER, P.H. (1963) Social Control in an African Society. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
GULLIVER, P.H. (1979) Disputes and Negotiations. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
HINDESS, Barry and Paul A., HIRST (1975) Pre-Capitalist Modes of Production. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
HOEBEL, Edward A. (1954) The Law of Primitive Man: A Study in Comparative Legal Dynamics. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
HUGHES, Graham (1973) “Disruption of the Judicial Process,” in Care, N.S. and Trelogan, T.K. (eds.), Issues in Law and Morality. Cleveland: Case Western Reserve University Press.Google Scholar
JACKSON, Elmore (1952) Meeting of Minds: A Way to Peace Through Mediation. New York: McGraw Hill.Google Scholar
KAWASHIMA, Takeyoshi (1973) “Dispute Settlement in Japan,” in Black, D. and Mileski, M. (eds.), The Social Organization of Law. New York: Seminar Press.Google Scholar
KIDDER, Robert L. (1981) “An End of the Road? Problems in the Analysis of Disputes,” 15 Law & Society Review 717.Google Scholar
KOCH, Klaus-Friedrich (ed.) (1979) “The Anthropological Perspective: Patterns of Conflict Management: Essays in the Ethnography of Law,” in Cappelletti, M. (ed.), Access to Justice, Vol. IV. Hague: Sijthoff.Google Scholar
KRITZER, Herbert (1981) “Studying Disputes: Learning from the CLRP Experience,” 15 Law & Society Review 504.Google Scholar
KULCSAR, Kalman (1980) Rechtsoziologische Abhandlungen. Budapest: Akademiai Kiedo.Google Scholar
KULCSAR, Kalman (1982) “Social Aspects of Litigation in Civil Courts,” in Cain, M. and Kulcsar, K. (eds.), The Study of Disputes. London: Pergamon, forthcoming.Google Scholar
KURCEWSKI, Jacek (1982) “Dispute and its Settlement,” in Cain, M. and Kulcsar, K. (eds.), The Study of Disputes. London: Pergamon, forthcoming.Google Scholar
KURCEWSKI, Jacek and Kazimierz, FRIESKE (1978) “The Social Conciliatory Commissions in Poland: A Case Study on Nonauthoritative and Conciliatory Dispute Resolution as an Approach to Access to Justice,” in Cappelletti, M. and Weisner, J. (eds.), Access to Justice, Vol. II, Book I, Promising Institutions. Hague: Sijthoff.Google Scholar
LEMPERT, Richard (1978) “More Tales of Two Courts: Exploring Changes in the Dispute Settlement Function,” 13 Law & Society Review 91.Google Scholar
LEMPERT, Richard (1981) “Grievances and Legitimacy: The Beginnings and End of Dispute Settlement,” 15 Law & Society Review 707.Google Scholar
LLEWELLYN, Karl N. (1940) “The Normative, the Legal, and the Law Jobs: The Problem of Juristic Method,” 49 Yale Law Journal 1355.Google Scholar
LLEWELLYN, Karl N., and Edward A., HOEBEL (1941) The Cheyenne Way: Conflict and Case-Law in Primitive Jurisprudence. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.Google Scholar
McINTOSH, Wayne (1981) “150 Years of Litigation and Dispute Settlement: A Court Tale,” 15 Law & Society Review 823.Google Scholar
MATHER, Lynne and Barbara, YNGVESSON (1979) “Language, Audience, and the Transformation of Disputes.” Paper presented to the Law and Society Association meeting, May, 1979, San Francisco. Reprinted in 15 Law & Society Review 775.Google Scholar
MATHIESEN, Thomas (1980) Law, Society, and Political Action: Towards a Strategy for Late Capitalism. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
MERRY, Sally (1979) “Going to Court: Strategies of Dispute Management in an American Urban Neighborhood,” 13 Law & Society Review 891.Google Scholar
MILLER, Richard and Austin, SARAT (1981) “Grievances, Claims, and Disputes: Assessing the Adversary Culture,” 15 Law & Society Review 525.Google Scholar
MOORE, Sally Falk (1969) “Law and Anthropology,” Biennial Review of Anthropology. Reprinted in S. Moore (1978), Law as Process. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
MOORE, Sally Falk (1978) Law as Process. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
NADER, Laura (1965) “The Anthropological Study of Law,” 67 (Part 2) American Anthropologist: Special Issue on the Ethnography of Law 6.Google Scholar
NADER, Laura (1969) Law in Culture and Society. Chicago: Aldine.Google Scholar
NADER, Laura and Harry F., TODD (eds.) (1978) The Disputing Process—Law in Ten Societies. New York: Columbia University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
NADER, Laura and Barbara, YNGVESSON (1973) “On Studying the Ethnography of Law and its Consequences,” in Honigman, J. (ed.) Handbook of Social and Cultural Anthropology. Chicago: Rand McNally.Google Scholar
NAUMOVA, S. (1982) “Formal and Informal Means of Dispute Treatment by Bulgarian Village Dwellers,” in Cain, M. and Kulcsar, K. (eds.), The Study of Disputes. London: Pergamon.Google Scholar
PARSONS, Talcott (1951) The Social System. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
PASHUKANIS, E. (1980) “A General Theory of Law and Marxism,” in Beirne, P. and Sharlet, R. (eds.), E.V. Pashukanis: Selected Writings on Marxism and Law. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
PLAIT, J. (1981) “On Positivism,” in Practice and Progress: British Sociology 1950-1980. London: Allen and Unwin.Google Scholar
POULANTZAS, Nicholas M. (1972) Political Power and Social Classes. London: New Left Books.Google Scholar
POULANTZAS, Nicholas M. (1975) Classes in Contemporary Capitalism. London: New Left Books.Google Scholar
ROBERTS, Simon (1979) Order and Dispute. Penguin: Harmondsworth.Google Scholar
ROKUMOTO, K. (1978) Legal Problems and The Use of Law in Tokio and London, mimeo, privately circulated.Google Scholar
ROSS, Edward A. (1901) Social Control. Reprinted 1969 Case Western Reserve University Press, Cleveland and London.Google Scholar
SARAT, Austin (1976) “Alternatives in Dispute Processing: Litigation in a Small Claims Court,” 10 Law & Society Review 339.Google Scholar
SARAT, Austin and Joel, GROSSMAN (1975) “Courts and Conflict Resolution: Problems in the Mobilization of Adjudication,” 69 American Political Science Review 1200.Google Scholar
DE SOUSA SANTOS, Boaventura (1980) “Law and Community: The Changing Nature of State Power in Late Capitalism,” 8 International Journal of the Sociology of Law 379.Google Scholar
STARR, June (1978) Dispute and Settlement in Rural Turkey: An Ethnography Of Law. Leiden: E.J. Brill.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
TODD, Harry (1978) “Litigious Marginals: Character and Disputing in a Bavarian Village,” in Nader, L. and Todd, H. (eds.), The Disputing Process—Law in Ten Societies. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
TOMASIC, Roman (1980) Mediation as an Alternative to Adjudication: Rhetoric and Reality in the Neighborhood Justice Movement. University of Wisconsin-Madison, Disputes Processing Research Program, Working Paper 1980–2.Google Scholar
TRUBEK, David (1981) “The Construction and Deconstruction of a Disputes-Focused Approach: An Afterword,” 15 Law & Society Review 727.Google Scholar
WANNER, Craig (1974) “The Public Ordering of Private Relations; Part One: Initiating Civil Cases in Urban Trial Courts,” 8 Law & Society Review 421.Google Scholar
WITTY, Cathie J. (1980) Mediation and Society: Conflict Management in Lebanon. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
YNGVESSON, Barbara (1978) “The Atlantic Fishermen,” in Nader, L. and Todd, H. (eds.), The Disputing Process—Law in Ten Societies. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar