Review
Praise for the original edition: "[T]he argument and findings of
Why People Obey the Law have important implications for the debate about the way in which people subject to legal procedures should be treated. . . . [T]he study is provocative and raises an issue of real importance. -- Roger Hood, Times Literary Supplement
Praise for the original edition: "Theoretically and empirically, Tyler makes a powerful case. . . . The data set is unusually rich. -- V. Lee Hamilton, Michigan Law Review
Praise for the original edition: "[A] major contribution by a well-known, well-respected scholar in the field. -- Austin Sarat, Law & Society Review
Praise for the original edition: "Tyler's book is interesting, significant, and clearly written. Most important, it contributes to an urgent need for critical consideration of . . . an ideology whose main results have been the current shameful state of the American penal system. -- Dario Melossi, Contemporary Sociology
Tyler's book posits an alternative model of legal compliance--one that focuses upon ways of obtaining public consent for and cooperation with particular regulatory regimes.... Though written from the perspective of the discipline of social psychology, there are lessons here for everybody involved or interested in legal regulation, governance or, indeed, community relations. -- Andrew Goldsmith, Law Society Journal
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
About the Author
Tom R. Tyler is University Professor at New York University, teaching in the Psychology Department and the Law School. He studies the exercise of authority in groups, organizations, and societies. His many books include "The Social Psychology of Procedural Justice, Social Justice in a Diverse Society, Cooperation in Groups," and "Trust in the Law".
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.