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Making Family Law: A Socio Legal Account of Legislative Process in England and Wales 1985 to 2010 at Meripustak

Making Family Law: A Socio Legal Account of Legislative Process in England and Wales 1985 to 2010 by Mavis MacLean Jacek Kurczewski, Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Books from same Author: Mavis MacLean Jacek Kurczewski

Books from same Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

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  • General Information  
    Author(s)Mavis MacLean Jacek Kurczewski
    PublisherBloomsbury Publishing PLC
    ISBN9781849462273
    Pages132
    BindingHardback
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearJune 2011

    Description

    Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Making Family Law: A Socio Legal Account of Legislative Process in England and Wales 1985 to 2010 by Mavis MacLean Jacek Kurczewski

    The legislative process is complex encompassing a variety of aims and outcomes. Some norms and rules are embodied in law because we are simply expected by government to follow them. Others are there for entirely different reasons. A legislator may wish to send messages about what constitutes desirable behaviour to demonstrate governments ability to deal with a local and short-term issue or to distract the electorate from other crises. Law is often though not always designed as a means to an end. Taking a sociological and empirically-based approach this book offers a rare insight into the real processes by which lawmakers attempt to influence (or fail to influence) human behaviour.This account of the legislative process in Westminster rests on the authors observations and discussion with key players from the standpoint of an academic adviser on research to the department responsible for family law-making (originally the Lord Chancellors department then the Department for Constitutional Affairs and now the Ministry of Justice) and draws on her longstanding involvement in and knowledge of the processes of law-making. Documenting the little understood processes that occur in Whitehall in particular how ministers advisers and officials work together it reveals a quite different picture from that of the rational lawmaker imagined in textbooks. Instead what emerges is an empirically-based view of the aims and functions of statute law including the different forms and relevance of symbolic legislation and a realistic view of what law aims to accomplish and what can be done in practice.show more



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