In a contribution to this Symposium on Law and Emotion: Re-Envisioning Family Law, Phillip Shaver and his co-authors succinctly encapsulate contemporary psychological theory on interpersonal attachment -- primarily parent-child attachment and its role in creating lifelong attachment patterns -- and seek to outline the relevance of such research for both social policy and law. This Comment demonstrates that many areas of family law already seek to cultivate and reward attachment. But attachment is not and cannot be the sole-or even, perhaps, the most important-factor driving most legal determinations. Recognizing the importance of secure attachment does not answer difficult questions about how best to achieve it, particularly within the cont...
In this article, Justice Hardie Boys explores a number of cases decided under the Matrimonial Proper...
This special issue of Oñati Socio-Legal Series, titled Judging, Emotion and Emotion Work, is the res...
There is burgeoning literature about the behavioral era in law–i.e., an era that seeks to conform ...
In a contribution to this Symposium on Law and Emotion: Re-Envisioning Family Law, Phillip Shaver an...
In a contribution to this Symposium on Law and Emotion: Re-Envisioning Family Law, Phillip Shaver an...
Attachment theory and research are drawn upon in many applied settings, including family courts, but...
Attachment theory and research are drawn upon in many applied settings, including family courts, but...
Attachment theory and research are drawn upon in many applied settings, including family courts, but...
The emerging interdisciplinary field of “Law and Emotions” brings together scholars from law, psycho...
Judges are human and experience emotion when hearing cases, though the standard account of judging l...
Scholars in the burgeoning field of law and emotion have paid surprisingly little attention to famil...
Judicial emotions—their display in the courtroom, influence on judicial behavior, and ultimately, th...
Law and emotion scholarship can engage with law on its own terms. It can seek to expose moments wher...
Legal scholarship on behavioralism and the implications of cognitive biases for the law is flouris...
In this article, Justice Hardie Boys explores a number of cases decided under the Matrimonial Proper...
This special issue of Oñati Socio-Legal Series, titled Judging, Emotion and Emotion Work, is the res...
There is burgeoning literature about the behavioral era in law–i.e., an era that seeks to conform ...
In a contribution to this Symposium on Law and Emotion: Re-Envisioning Family Law, Phillip Shaver an...
In a contribution to this Symposium on Law and Emotion: Re-Envisioning Family Law, Phillip Shaver an...
Attachment theory and research are drawn upon in many applied settings, including family courts, but...
Attachment theory and research are drawn upon in many applied settings, including family courts, but...
Attachment theory and research are drawn upon in many applied settings, including family courts, but...
The emerging interdisciplinary field of “Law and Emotions” brings together scholars from law, psycho...
Judges are human and experience emotion when hearing cases, though the standard account of judging l...
Scholars in the burgeoning field of law and emotion have paid surprisingly little attention to famil...
Judicial emotions—their display in the courtroom, influence on judicial behavior, and ultimately, th...
Law and emotion scholarship can engage with law on its own terms. It can seek to expose moments wher...
Legal scholarship on behavioralism and the implications of cognitive biases for the law is flouris...
In this article, Justice Hardie Boys explores a number of cases decided under the Matrimonial Proper...
This special issue of Oñati Socio-Legal Series, titled Judging, Emotion and Emotion Work, is the res...
There is burgeoning literature about the behavioral era in law–i.e., an era that seeks to conform ...