Professor Robert P. Burns of Northwestern University School of Law offers an insightful critique of the modern American criminal justice system in his new work Kafka\u2019s Law: \u2018The Trial\u2019 and American Criminal Justice (University of Chicago Press 2014). This interview explores the characteristics of Kafka\u2019s \u201cLaw\u201d and exposes where and how these characteristics exist within the American criminal justice system.\n\nBurns leads us through the absurd regime The Trial\u2018s protagonist must navigate after he finds himself accused of an unknown crime. Kafka\u2019s dystopian law is unknowable, ubiquitous, overly bureaucratic and yet overly informal. In the story\u2019s world the law functions like God and guilt is inevitable. These legal characteristics may appear to be part of an absurd dystopian fantasy world derived from the same wild imagination that produced a story in which a man metamorphoses into a bug. However, we learn in the second half of the interview that the dystopian themes in The Trial capture a present-day reality for many who are accused of crimes in America.\n\nBurns\u2019s work exposing Kafkaesque aspects of our legal system and his search to find the most effective means of remedying these situations is vastly important to the societal goal of narrowing the gap between justice and law.\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices\nSupport our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/law