cover image Life Without Lawyers: Liberating Americans from Too Much Law

Life Without Lawyers: Liberating Americans from Too Much Law

Philip K. Howard. W. W. Norton & Company, $24.95 (224pp) ISBN 978-0-393-06566-4

In his latest prescriptive survey of American law abuse and its consequences, Howard (The Death of Common Sense, The Collapse of the Common Good) sticks to the formula: one ghastly anecdote after another demonstrating how the justice system hinders freedom and confounds Americans who simply want to do the right thing. Either through litigation or the fear of it, Howard argues, we've ceded our everyday decision-making to the lawyers (we ""might as well give a legal club to the most unreasonable and selfish person in the enterprise"") resulting in everything from ""no running on the playground"" signs to a 5-year-old handcuffed at school by police; from diminishing health care quality and spiraling costs to doctors afraid of discussing treatments among themselves over email. Chair of nonpartisan advocacy organization Common Good, Howard has a great deal of knowledge and a catalog of abuses that will elicit fury and despair. For the third time in some 15 years, Howard agitates for change by asking ""How did the land of freedom become a legal minefield?""; in this time of financial depression and political hope, Howard may have found the perfect moment to sound his alarm.