University of Minnesota law preofessor Jim Chen has launched a new blog, Jurisdynamics. In his first post, he explains the blog’s title:
Jurisdynamics describes the interplay between legal responses to exogenous change and the law’s own endogenous capacity for adaptation. The world that law tries to govern has has become “so vast that fully to comprehend it would require an almost universal knowledge ranging from” economics and the natural sciences “to the niceties of the legislative, judicial and administrative processes of government.” Queensboro Farms Prods., Inc. v. Wickard, 137 F.2d 969, 975 (2d Cir. 1943). Within the realm of legal scholarship, this blog aspires to the goal that historian David Christian set out for his discipline: “that the appropriate time scale for the study of history may be the whole of time.” David Christian, The Case for “Big History,” 2 J. World Hist. 223, 223 (1991). Jurisdynamics will present the case for “big law,” for the proposition that the substantive scale on which law should be studied, taught, and learned is the entirety of human experience.
Jim’s work is typically provocative and engaing, so I would expect his blog to be so as well. Welcome to the blogosphere!