Good Read: Philip K. Howard's Life Without Lawyers
Philip K. Howard, the tremendously talented lawyer and legal reformer, has just released his new book Life Without Lawyers: Liberating Americans
From Too Much Law. This is a must-read for anyone concerned with the increasing incapacitation of American institutions from the malady of hyper-legalism.
Howard’s third book, Life Without Lawyers has been called “2009’s most needed book on public affairs” by Pulitzer Prize winning columnist George Will. Howard argues that it is basically impossible to fix schools, health care, or government until people with responsibility are liberated to use their common sense—so that teachers can maintain order in the classroom and doctors can avoid squandering billions in defensive medicine. “What is needed is not a reform but a quiet revolution,” writes Howard. “…We must remake our legal structures so that Americans are free again to make sense of everyday choices.” In addition to the Will piece, the book has also been reviewed by Evan Thomas in Newsweek, and Stuart Taylor in National Journal.
Life Without Lawyers is available at Amazon.com and at your local bookstore.