The Unbearable Lightness of Christian Legal Scholarship
David A. Skeel, Jr.
University of Pennsylvania Law School
Date:聽February 6, 2008
Abstract
Despite聽a rise in influence of evangelical and other theologically conservative Christians, the scope of Christian legal scholarship is shockingly narrow. The fraught relationship between religion and American higher education starting in the late nineteenth century may account for the lack of Christian legal scholarship.聽Between nonsectarian, scientific approaches to education and American evangelical disdain for the public life, Christian legal scholarship has largely been ignored. Skeel attempts to fill this void by presenting聽a case for a normative Christian legal scholarship.
Speaker Bio
David A. Skeel, Jr.聽is S. Samuel Arsht Professor of Corporate Law at University of Pennsylvania Law School. Skeel is an expert in bankruptcy and corporate labor law. He holds a J.D. from the University of Virginia and a B.A. from the University of North Carolina. He has been interviewed on Nightline, Chris Matthews鈥 Hardball (MS-N天美传媒app), National Public Radio, and Marketplace, among others, and has been quoted in聽The New York Times,听Wall Street Journal,听The Washington Post, and many other publications. He is the author of聽Icarus in the Boardroom聽(Oxford, 2005) and聽Debt鈥檚 Dominion: A History of Bankruptcy Law in America聽(Princeton, 2001), as well as numerous articles and other publications. In addition to corporate law and bankruptcy, Skeel writes on sovereign debt law and religion, and poetry and the law, and is an elder at Tenth Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia.
Event Photos
Event Recap
Last year Provost Cutberto Garza selected Alan Wolfe to lead a two-year faculty seminar on 鈥淲ays of Knowing and the Catholic Intellectual Traditions,鈥 as part of a broader university initiative to examine the Jesuit and Catholic traditions here at Boston College. In addition to its seminars, the Catholic Intellectual Traditions (CIT) program also hosts public events, two of which were co-sponsored this year by the Boisi Center.
At a February 6th lunch colloquium, University of Pennsylvania law professor David Skeel argued that the scope of Christian legal scholarship today is shockingly narrow, despite the rising influence of theologically conservative Christians. As Skeel defines it, Christian legal scholarship engages secular legal scholarship while presenting either a normative theory of law based on scripture or tradition, or a descriptive account of the relation of Christianity and law. He explained the dearth of such work in elite law journals since 1900 as the result of tensions between religion and higher education that began in the late 19th century and grew as American evangelicals retreated from public life. Skeel noted, however, that Christian legal scholarship has increased in recent years, especially with regard to questions of church and state, natural law, legal ethics and Christian legal history.
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Further Reading
William Stuntz, "Christian Legal Theory." 116 HARV. L. REV. 1707 (2003).