As a denizen of the United States, I feel an urgent need to compensate for past laziness and cynicism (excuses for laziness) by learning more about government, politics, economics, history, and the law. I want to be able to form my own opinions rather than accepting those of a publication, pundit, or party. In so doing, I should be able to better discuss and debate issues of importance with family and friends, and to support or oppose those that matter.
The Law Book: From Hammurabi to the International Criminal Court, 250 Milestones in the History of Law, part of the outstanding Sterling Milestones series, contributed substantially to my education. The milestones are well chosen to represent the evolution of law from ancient times through British common law to the modern American system. Each milestone occupies a two-page spread, with a generally interesting and useful picture on one page and a succinct, well-written account on the facing page. The pictures isolate the words and help the reader to process them.
On the one hand, I am relieved that the book never attempts to patronize us with a grandiloquent account of the mighty edifice of justice, all wigs, robes, and columns. On the other hand, I was saddened to come away with a visceral disgust for a system that remains highly political, greedy, and ineffective. It works, more or less. Considering the disarray of American politics and the contempt in which politicians are held it is unsurprising that most politicians are lawyers. Their lack of scientific and technological understanding is patently obvious in the lack of scientific process in our archaic legal system and, ironically, in the absence of evidence to show what actually happens and what really works. Many decisions seem entirely arbitrary, or merely responsive to public opinion or political pressure. The mighty edifice of the law is as much about providing a well-protected living for its occupants as an effective, fair, and decent society.