Sanguinity and disillusionment where law meets social science.

Abstract
The current state of legally oriented social science research is a mixture of success and unfulfilled promise. Despite numerous indications that the relationship between social science and law continues to improve, dissatisfaction persists because a true empirical jurisprudence has not developed and because most research remains focused on a narrow range of legal topics. While commentators beseech their colleagues to expand the scope of inquiry, a variety of drawbacks still deter all but an intrepid few. Inhibiting factors include uncertainty about whether any particular study will influence policy making, and a professional reward structure that discourages interdisciplinary empirical research.

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