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What Hath Faith Wrought? - Faith and Law: How Religious Traditions from Calvinism to Islam View American Law. By Robert F. Cochran. New York University Press2008. Pp.299. $25.00. ISBN: 0-814-71673-3.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 April 2015

Abstract

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Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © Center for the Study of Law and Religion at Emory University 2008

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References

1. On Stringfellow's influence on Christian lawyering, see Radical Christian and Exemplary Lawyer: Honoring William Stringfellow (McThenia, Andrew W. Jr. ed., Eerdmans Publg. Co. 1995)Google Scholar. A bibliography of Stringfellow's many works is found in A Keeper of the Word: Selected Writings of William Stringfellow 416426 (Kellermann, Bill Wylie ed., Eerdmans Publg. Co. 1994)Google Scholar.

2. Berman, Harold Joseph, The Interaction of Law and Religion (Abingdon Press 1974)Google Scholar.

3. Thomas L. Shaffer, On Being a Christian and a Lawyer (BYU Press 1981)Google Scholar; Shaffer, Thomas L., Faith and the Professions (SUNY Press 1987)Google Scholar; Ball, Milner S., The Word and the Law (U. Chi. Press 1993)Google Scholar.

4. See e.g. Levine, Samuel J., Emerging Applications of Jewish Law in American Legal Scholarship: An Introduction, 23 J.L. & Religion 43 (20072008)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Pearce, Russell G., Foreword: The Religious Lawyering Movement: An Emerging Force in Legal Ethics and Professionalism, 66 Fordham L. Rev. 1075, 1076 (1998)Google Scholar (listing articles on lawyering from a Jewish perspective).

5. See e.g. Symposium, The Relevance of Religion to a Lawyer's Work: An Interfaith Conference, 66 Fordham L. Rev. 1075 et seq. (1998)Google Scholar.

6. Christian Perspectives on Legal Thought (McConnell, Michael W., Cochran, Robert F. Jr., Cannella, Angela C. eds., Yale U. Press 2001)Google Scholar.

7. The Teachings of Modern Orthodox Christianity on Law, Politics, and Human Nature (Witte, John Jr. & Alexander, Frank S. eds., Colum. U. Press 2006)Google Scholar. In 2007, this work was republished in three volumes, one each on modern Protestant, Orthodox, and Roman Catholic thought.

8. See Daniel J. Wakin & Julia Preston, Pope Speaks Up for Immigrants, Touching a Nerve, http://www.nytimesxom/2008/04/20/us/20catholics.html?_r=l&pagewanted=l&fta=y&oref=slog in (last accessed Sept. 22, 2008) (noting statements of Benedict supportive of immigrants which “pointedly avoiding any specifics of the American immigration debate, like the issue of whether to grant legal status to illegal immigrants”).