A strikingly original, highly accessible, and well-worked-out theory of the nature of law. Shapiro is on the positivist side, but a tremendous strength of the book is that it engages deeply and sympathetically with natural law and anti-positivist theorists. Everyone serious about the philosophy of law needs to read this book.--Mark Greenberg, University of California, Los Angeles
An outstanding contribution--almost certainly the most important book on its topic since Dworkin's Law's Empire. Legality develops a novel and forceful account of the nature of law, but the engagements with other prominent accounts are so resolutely fair and powerfully presented that, were I to suggest one book for someone wanting to understand contemporary debates in jurisprudence, this would be it.--Arthur Ripstein, University of Toronto
Legality is the most important contribution about the nature of law in recent years and a book that raises the bar for future work in jurisprudence. With admirable clarity, Shapiro argues that legal systems should not be understood simply in terms of rules, but instead as highly complex tools for creating and applying plans. His account offers an illuminating alternative to the literature and challenges much received wisdom.--Thom Brooks "Times Higher Education" (2/7/2013 12:00:00 AM)
It cannot be doubted that Shapiro's book, which clarifies and advances analytical jurisprudence, is bound to be a classic text.--Ekow Yankah "Jotwell" (9/12/2011 12:00:00 AM)
[Legality] is a sympathetic, accessible, and highly readable exposition of the theories that have preceded it. It is now one of the best single-authored introductions to the subject. It is also a significant contribution. Moreover, it is an apologia for the subject itself, and for the method of conceptual analysis as a way of uncovering the nature and grounds of law... Both as a defense and example of analytic jurisprudence...this book is unrivalled.--William A. Edmundson "Jurisprudence" (6/1/2011 12:00:00 AM)
This book is...imaginative, incisive, fair to interlocutors, and written with elegance and wit... It is essential reading for philosophers of law.--Mark C. Murphy "Law and Philosophy" (5/1/2011 12:00:00 AM)
I feel confident that Legality is one of the very best books in general jurisprudence in many, many years... I suspect that Legality will become a standard work for students of law and philosophy... Everyone who engages in the academic study of law should read Legality--it is that important.--Lawrence B. Solum "Legal Theory blog" (12/11/2010 12:00:00 AM)
Rich and vibrant with jurisprudential ambition... There are lots of riches in Scott Shapiro's book... I have not been able to convey how well this book is written or how much light the author is able to shed along the way on various issues in the philosophy of law... It shows that the idea of planning can indeed cast light on the problems of jurisprudence without necessarily blinding us to other analogies and other sources of insight.--Jeremy Waldron "Michigan Law Review" (4/1/2011 12:00:00 AM)
Scott Shapiro's Legality is a rich and ambitious discussion of law's fundamental nature. Almost every page is provocative, touching upon many of the most interesting, complicated and controversial areas within this area of inquiry.--Stefan Sciaraffa "Oxford Journal of Legal Studies" (9/1/2011 12:00:00 AM)
Legality makes a contribution to the field that no student of jurisprudence can ignore.--Judith Baer "Political Science Quarterly" (12/1/2011 12:00:00 AM)
Shapiro has produced a work of enduring significance.--Frederick Schauer "Yale Law Journal" (12/1/2010 12:00:00 AM)
Highly recommended.-- "Choice" (8/1/2011 12:00:00 AM)