Making Law for Families

Front Cover
Mavis Maclean
Hart Publishing, 2000 - 211 pages

Making Law for Families is the result of a workshop organized by Mavis Maclean and held between May 26 and June 2,1999, at the international Institute for the Sociology of Law (IISL) in Onati, Spain.

This book analyzes the concept of the family in the context of increasing challenges and questions created by multicultural societies in ever more complicated international and transnational legal contexts.
How is the family defined across cultural and national divides? To what extent and under what conditions should any particular state intervene? The collected essays in this volume seek to answer these and other difficult questions through grounded empirical research and insightful appreciation of how political systems function in various countries.
An underlying concern is to explore to what extent and under what terms will the family endure in the future as a basic unit of social management and control.

This book is part of the Oñati International Series in Law and Society.

From inside the book

Contents

1 Introduction
1
The Normative Aspect
7
Part Two The Politique of the LawMaking Venture
49

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About the author (2000)

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

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