The shadow of the law is a concept in American legal literature which refers to settling cases or making plea bargains in a way that takes into account what would happen at trial. It has been argued that criminal trials resolve such a small percentage of criminal cases "that their shadows are faint and hard to discern."
The phrase was coined by law professors Robert H. Mnookin and Lewis Kornhauser (when they were colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley), and was popularized by them in a 1979 law review article; it has since become common in sociolegal literature.
Today, Mnookin and Kornhauser's 1979 article is widely recognized as a landmark article "which legitimized the study of negotiation within the legal academy" by "tethering bargaining to jurisprudence". A 2012 study determined that as of that year, it was the nineteenth most-cited law review article of all time.
References
- Stephanos Bibas (July 2004). "Plea Bargaining outside the Shadow of Trial". Harvard Law Review. 117 (8): 2463–2547.
- Robert H. Mnookin and Lewis Kornhauser, "Bargaining in the Shadow of the Law: The Case of Divorce", Yale Law Journal, Vol. 88, No. 5, Dispute Resolution (Apr. 1979), pp. 950–997.
- Chen, Ming Hsu (2018). "Regulatory Rights: Civil Rights Agencies, Courts, and the Entrenchment of Language Rights". In Dodd, Lynda G. (ed.). The Rights Revolution Revisited: Institutional Perspectives on the Private Enforcement of Civil Rights in the U.S. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 100–122. ISBN 9781316730713. Retrieved 2 January 2021. See fn. 41 at p. 110.
- Tippett, Elizabeth C. (2021). "Bargaining in the Shadow of the Law: The Case for ADR as a Field of Study". In Schneider, Andrea Kupfer; Hinshaw, Art; Cole, Sarah Rudolph (eds.). Discussions in Dispute Resolution: The Foundational Articles. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 9–12. ISBN 9780197513248. Retrieved December 16, 2023.
- Mnookin, Robert (2021). "Bargaining in the Shadow of the Law Reassessed". In Schneider, Andrea Kupfer; Hinshaw, Art; Cole, Sarah Rudolph (eds.). Discussions in Dispute Resolution: The Foundational Articles. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 22–26. ISBN 9780197513248. Retrieved December 16, 2023.
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