Lawyers and Mediators: The Brave New World of Services for Separating Families
Do lawyers make matters worse, or do they provide information, advice and support which can help to prevent disputes arising or manage them when they do? Do mediators enable parties to communicate and reach agreements tailor-made to their needs? Or working outside the legal framework, do they find it difficult to protect weaker parties and access expert advice? What happens when lawyers become mediators? This book will describe the structure of service provision and the day-to-day work of lawyers, mediators, and lawyer mediators, drawing on empirical work carried out between 2013 and 2015 immediately after the recent changes to the management of divorce and separation within the family justice system. The reduction in legal aided help in 2013 and the failure of mediation to fill the gap in 2014–15 have given rise to a difficult debate. This book aims to provide an account of some of the practical effects of these policies through a description of the daily work of practitioners in the sector. It raises the question of whether we need to choose between traditional legal services and the new processes of private ordering or whether intermediate positions might be possible.
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Lawyers and Mediators: The Brave New World of Services for Separating Families
Do lawyers make matters worse, or do they provide information, advice and support which can help to prevent disputes arising or manage them when they do? Do mediators enable parties to communicate and reach agreements tailor-made to their needs? Or working outside the legal framework, do they find it difficult to protect weaker parties and access expert advice? What happens when lawyers become mediators? This book will describe the structure of service provision and the day-to-day work of lawyers, mediators, and lawyer mediators, drawing on empirical work carried out between 2013 and 2015 immediately after the recent changes to the management of divorce and separation within the family justice system. The reduction in legal aided help in 2013 and the failure of mediation to fill the gap in 2014–15 have given rise to a difficult debate. This book aims to provide an account of some of the practical effects of these policies through a description of the daily work of practitioners in the sector. It raises the question of whether we need to choose between traditional legal services and the new processes of private ordering or whether intermediate positions might be possible.
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Lawyers and Mediators: The Brave New World of Services for Separating Families

Lawyers and Mediators: The Brave New World of Services for Separating Families

Lawyers and Mediators: The Brave New World of Services for Separating Families

Lawyers and Mediators: The Brave New World of Services for Separating Families

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Overview

Do lawyers make matters worse, or do they provide information, advice and support which can help to prevent disputes arising or manage them when they do? Do mediators enable parties to communicate and reach agreements tailor-made to their needs? Or working outside the legal framework, do they find it difficult to protect weaker parties and access expert advice? What happens when lawyers become mediators? This book will describe the structure of service provision and the day-to-day work of lawyers, mediators, and lawyer mediators, drawing on empirical work carried out between 2013 and 2015 immediately after the recent changes to the management of divorce and separation within the family justice system. The reduction in legal aided help in 2013 and the failure of mediation to fill the gap in 2014–15 have given rise to a difficult debate. This book aims to provide an account of some of the practical effects of these policies through a description of the daily work of practitioners in the sector. It raises the question of whether we need to choose between traditional legal services and the new processes of private ordering or whether intermediate positions might be possible.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781509904846
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 02/25/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 176
File size: 466 KB

About the Author

Mavis Maclean is co-founder of the Oxford Centre for Family Law and Policy, Oxford University and Senior Research Fellow of St Hilda's College, Oxford.
John Eekelaar is Emeritus Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford and co-director of the Oxford Centre for Family Law and Policy.
Mavis Maclean is Co-Founder of the Oxford Centre for Family Law and Policy, Department of Social Policy and Intervention, Oxford University and Senior Research Fellow of St Hilda's College, Oxford, UK.


Photo courtesy of the University of Oxford: https://www.spi.ox.ac.uk/people/profile/maclean/index.html
John Eekelaar is Emeritus Fellow of Pembroke College, University of Oxford.


Photo courtesy of Faculty of Law, University of Oxford.

Table of Contents

1. Family Legal Services and the State
2. The Marketisation of the Legal Profession
3. What Solicitors are Doing
4. The Organisation and Aims of Mediation in England and Wales
5. The Practice of Family Mediators I: Non-Lawyers
6. The Practice of Family Mediators II: Legally Trained Mediators
7. Towards an Integrated Service?
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