I am not the first to notice that law professors, and academics generally, have their own jargon and favorite buzzwords. Some websites do a nice job of highlighting (or mocking) many of the odds turns of phrase many of us use. Lawyers in the practicing bar do this, too, of course, and other professionals, especially business people (see, e.g., Dilbert) and public relations professionals.
I try not to be too jargon-y, but I have caught myself more than a few times. I am big on “incentivize,” for example. After attending a great SEALS Conference (likely more on that to come), I came away with a bunch of new ideas, a few new friends, and some hope for future collaboration. I also came away noticing that, sometimes, as a group, “we talk funny.” On that front, two words keep coming to my mind: “unpack” and “normative.”
So, when did we all “need” to start “unpacking” arguments?
This seemed like a relatively recent phenomenon to me, so I checked. A Westlaw search of “adv: unpack! /3 argument” reveals 140 uses in Secondary Sources. The first such reference appears in a 1982 law review article: Michael Moore, Moral Reality, 1982 Wis.