Robert Burt in, “The Yale School of Law and Psychoanalysis, from 1963 Onward”, in this issue, explains and laments a decline in influence of psychoanalytic ideas in legal thinking. He notes “the fundamental similarity that both litigation and psychotherapy involve recollections of past events”, buttressing his argument with eight parallels between the two. In this article we take up Burt's theme, first noting the relationship between therapeutic jurisprudence and psychoanalytic concepts before presenting an outline for a psychoanalytical understanding of the judicial role. We then consider the litigation process from the linked perspectives of therapeutic jurisprudence and psychoanalysis before closing with a reflection on the eight paralle...
Jay Katz has been one of the most profound and enduring influences on my life as a legal scholar. Hi...
Therapeutic jurisprudence is commonly cited as the theoretical foundation for a range of specialized...
Jay Katz has been one of the most profound and enduring influences on my life as a legal scholar. Hi...
Robert Burt in, "The Yale School of Law and Psychoanalysis, from 1963 Onward", in this issue, explai...
Therapeutic jurisprudence, developed in the late 1980s, is a field of inquiry. It is a lens through ...
If therapeutic jurisprudence is so good, its applicability should not be limited to the trial courts...
Therapeutic Jurisprudence (TJ), a concept first conceived by law professors David Wexler (University...
In this Introduction, I will briefly summarize Des Rosiers\u27 Court Review article, entitled From T...
‘Improving therapeutic outcomes for defendants: measuring the therapeutic contributions of legal act...
This Article begins with a modest objective and ends with an ambitious one. First, it asserts that a...
The purpose of this paper is to briefly analyze two levels of potential and actual interrelationship...
Having recognized that there can be both therapeutic and antitherapeutic effects of judicial decisio...
Thomas Scheff describes and endorses community conferences intended to develop dispositions of some ...
Psychoanalysis endeavors to provide a systematic theory of human behavior. Law, both as a body of su...
This article offers a number of suggestions concerning how judges should act in problem solving cour...
Jay Katz has been one of the most profound and enduring influences on my life as a legal scholar. Hi...
Therapeutic jurisprudence is commonly cited as the theoretical foundation for a range of specialized...
Jay Katz has been one of the most profound and enduring influences on my life as a legal scholar. Hi...
Robert Burt in, "The Yale School of Law and Psychoanalysis, from 1963 Onward", in this issue, explai...
Therapeutic jurisprudence, developed in the late 1980s, is a field of inquiry. It is a lens through ...
If therapeutic jurisprudence is so good, its applicability should not be limited to the trial courts...
Therapeutic Jurisprudence (TJ), a concept first conceived by law professors David Wexler (University...
In this Introduction, I will briefly summarize Des Rosiers\u27 Court Review article, entitled From T...
‘Improving therapeutic outcomes for defendants: measuring the therapeutic contributions of legal act...
This Article begins with a modest objective and ends with an ambitious one. First, it asserts that a...
The purpose of this paper is to briefly analyze two levels of potential and actual interrelationship...
Having recognized that there can be both therapeutic and antitherapeutic effects of judicial decisio...
Thomas Scheff describes and endorses community conferences intended to develop dispositions of some ...
Psychoanalysis endeavors to provide a systematic theory of human behavior. Law, both as a body of su...
This article offers a number of suggestions concerning how judges should act in problem solving cour...
Jay Katz has been one of the most profound and enduring influences on my life as a legal scholar. Hi...
Therapeutic jurisprudence is commonly cited as the theoretical foundation for a range of specialized...
Jay Katz has been one of the most profound and enduring influences on my life as a legal scholar. Hi...