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Bentham, Bacon and the Movement for the Reform of English Law Reporting

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  • Munday, Roderick

Abstract

The disordered state of English law reporting has for long been a favoured theme of writers on the common law. The volume of printed case law, the casual nature of its publication and its variable quality have all been frequently criticized. If earlier centuries had been largely content to express intermittent displeasure, in the nineteenth century concrete solutions were found, the obvious product of this bid to achieve a rational system of law reporting being the Incorporated Council of Law Reporting and its authoritative series of Law Reports. But if ultimately reform of the system was only realized once the profession seized the initiative in the middle of the nineteenth century, it would be an error to suppose that schemes for reform had not been conceived in earlier times. After all, only by a miracle could anything as blatantly haphazard as the quality of law reporting have escaped the strictures of major reformers.

Suggested Citation

  • Munday, Roderick, 1992. "Bentham, Bacon and the Movement for the Reform of English Law Reporting," Utilitas, Cambridge University Press, vol. 4(2), pages 299-316, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:utilit:v:4:y:1992:i:02:p:299-316_00
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