Family Law

Divorcing Responsibly

By Helen Reece
Hart Publishing July 2005

Specifications

ISBN-13
9781841132150
Publisher
Hart Publishing
Publication
July 2005
Format
Hardback , 272 pages
Jurisdiction
U.K. ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

This study provides an analysis of the increasing impact on the law in general and divorce law in particular of post-liberalism, which replaces choice with self-discovery. The author shows that post-liberal premises formed the foundation for every aspect of the recent divorce reform proposals. Accordingly, she attributes their failure to the contradictions inherent within post-liberalism. Nevertheless, she concludes that post-liberalism maintains a subtle yet pervasive influence on the law. Specifically, this means that we are held accountable not for what we do but for how we approach our decisions. Thus, for the first time ever, it has become possible to divorce responsibly.

About the Author

Helen Reece is a Barrister and Reader in Law at Birkbeck College London.

Reviews

This is a fascinating book. It is immensely well-researched, painstakingly argued and always perceptive…[It] can be recommended to anyone interested in contemporary political theory, to students of social policy, to those interested in the limits of law and, of course, to family lawyers.
Michael Freeman
The Modern Law Review, Vol 69, No 1
Jan 06



...provides both a sustained journey through theory (liberal, feminist, lesbian, communitarian, post liberal) and a journey through the new divorce law.
Susan B. Boyd
International Journal of Law in Context
2006



Her [Reece] anaylsis of the different theoretical arguments is masterly...
Rebecca Probert, University of Warwick
International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family
April 2005



This book is informative, thoughtful and well-researched.
Shelley Day Sclater
Times Higher Education Supplement
February 2004



Reece provides a meticulous and scholarly examination of contemporary theoretical writing on the nature of liberal and 'post-liberal' society, including communitarianism and feminism, and makes a compelling case that the Family Law Act 1996 contains the features identified in this analysis.

She writes with great clarity and insight, and presents a powerful argument which will be a major tool for a critical understanding of modern family policy.
John Eekelaar
Journal of Law and Society
June 2004

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