Johnson presents a valuable new approach to the study of legal history and the study of historical legal records for social history, and offers valuable insights into each of the constituent parts that make up the study.
Euan C. Roger, Nottingham Medieval Studies
In freeing medieval law and legality from the confines of conventional legal history, Law in Common offers an astonishingly inventive and stimulating new perspective on the social, political, and material world of fifteenth-century England. It is a major achievement.
Rowan Dorin, The Medieval Review
There is much of interest in this volume...this book is going to be essential for anyone interested in local courts in late medieval England and the evidence they provide for how common people interacted with the law.
Paul Brand, Speculum
[A] magisterial study of English legal cultures in the long fifteenth century...combining the legal historian's rigorous knowledge of "the system" with a social and cultural historical curiosity for the practices and experiences of non-elites.
Frans Camphuijsen, Journal of British Studies