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The Brandeis Brief was a pioneering legal brief that was the first in United States legal history to rely more on a compilation of scientific information and social science than on legal citations. It is named after then-litigator and eventual associate Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, who presented it in his argument for the 1908 US Supreme Court case Muller v. Oregon. The brief was submitted in support of a state law restricting the number of hours women were allowed to work. The Brandeis Brief consisted of more than 100 pages, only two of which were devoted to legal argument. The rest of the document contained testimony by medics, social scientists, and male workers arguing that long working hours had a negative effect on the "health, safety, morals, and general welfare of women."

Brandeis's sister-in-law, legal reformer Josephine Clara Goldmark of the National Consumers League, helped compile most of the information in the brief.

"Josephine Goldmark, aided by her sister Pauline and several volunteer researchers, scoured the Columbia University and New York Public Libraries in search of materials of the kind Brandeis wanted -- facts and figures on dangers to women's health, safety, and morals from working excessive hours, and on the societal benefits shortened hours could yield. Data was extracted from reports of factory inspectors, physicians, trade unions, economists, and social workers. Within a month, Goldmark's team compiled information that filled 98 of the 113 pages in Brandeis' brief."

Despite the fact that the scientific evidence detailed in the Brandeis Brief was later challenged and widely refuted, it was regarded as a pioneering attempt to combine law and social science. The Brandeis Brief changed the direction of the Supreme Court and of U.S. law. It became the model for future Supreme Court presentations in cases affecting the health or welfare of classes of individuals. This strategy of combining legal argument with scientific evidence was later successfully used in Brown v. Board of Education to demonstrate the harmful psychological effects of segregated education on African-American children.


Video Brandeis Brief



References


Maps Brandeis Brief



Further reading

  • Bernstein, David E. (2011). "Brandeis Brief Myths" (PDF). The Green Bag. 15 (1): 9-15. 
  • Evans, Sandra S.; Scott, Joseph E. (1983). "Social Scientists as Expert Witnesses: Their Use, Misuse, and Sometimes Abuse". Law & Policy Quarterly. 5 (2): 181-214. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9930.1983.tb00295.x. ISSN 0164-0267. 
  • Garfinkel, Herbert (1959). "Social Science Evidence and the School Segregation Cases". Journal of Politics. Cambridge University Press. 21 (1): 37-59. doi:10.2307/2126643. JSTOR 2126643. 
  • Tomkins, Alan J.; Oursland, Kevin (1991). "Social and social scientific perspectives in judicial interpretations of the constitution: A historical view and an overview". Law and Human Behavior. 15 (2): 101-120. doi:10.1007/BF01044613. 

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External links

  • The full Brandeis Brief, courtesy of the Louis D. Brandeis School of Law (University of Louisville)


Source of the article : Wikipedia

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