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University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series |
Last Updated: 3 December 2012
Missing All That Matters
Martin Krygier, University of New South Wales
This paper is available for
download at Available at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2184110
Citation
This paper will be published in Issues in Legal Scholarship 2012, vol.10, Issue 1, forthcoming. This paper may also be referenced as [2012] UNSWLRS 54.
Abstract
Philip Selznick spent a very long life engaged with
large questions concerning society, politics, institutions, law and morals. He
contributed to numerous disciplines and sub-disciplinary domains, was a major
figure in each of the fields he entered, and one of
few to have been a
participant, let alone eminent, in them all. Among these fields are general
sociology, the sociology of organizations
and institutions, management theory,
political science, industrial sociology, the sociology and philosophy of law,
political theory,
and social philosophy grounded in what he came to call
humanist science.
I have recently completed a book on his thought and
ways of thought.Naturally enough, it discusses his contributions to these
various
subjects and domains. But it is haunted, I am haunted, by a remark of
his former student and sometime collaborator, Philippe Nonet,
that
‘[t]hose who look to Philip’s work for contributions to this or that
“field” – “sociology
of organization,”
“industrial sociology,” “sociology of law,” - will
doubtless find something, indeed
a great deal, but they will miss all that
matters.’ The point might be phrased less dramatically; perhaps not all,
just lots.
Still, the observation resonates. My book seeks to vindicate my
particular understanding of it, which may or may not be Nonet’s.
These
remarks are an attempt to distil some elements of that understanding.
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