06872oam 2200601I 450 991079758320332120230126214602.090-04-26149-410.1163/9789004261495(CKB)3710000000465440(EBL)4540470(SSID)ssj0001677956(PQKBManifestationID)16489146(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001677956(PQKBWorkID)15022973(PQKB)11264857(MiAaPQ)EBC4540470(OCoLC)917372115(OCoLC)914080924(OCoLC)914217724(OCoLC)925439141(nllekb)BRILL9789004261495(EXLCZ)99371000000046544020150714d2015 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrLaw in society reflections on children, family, culture and philosophy : essays in honour of Michael Freeman /edited by Alison Diduck, Noam Peleg, and Helen ReeceLeiden, the Netherlands :Brill Nijhoff.c2015.1 online resource (685 p.)Description based upon print version of record.90-04-26148-6 Includes bibliographical references.Preliminary Material /Alison Diduck , Noam Peleg and Helen Reece -- Introduction /Alison Diduck , Noam Peleg and Helen Reece -- Professing Jurisprudence /Roger Cotterrell -- Laws, Values, Cultures /John Eekelaar -- Philosophy of Law: Secular and Religious (With Some Reference to Jewish Family Law) /Bernard S. Jackson -- Rules of Forgiveness and the Role of Narratives in Talmudic Law /David Nelken -- The People’s Choice: Law in Culture and Society /Lawrence M. Friedman -- ‘A Child’s Mind as a Blank Book’: Myth, Childhood, and the Corporation /Anne McGillivray -- Taking Children’s Rights Seriously: The Need for a Multilingual Approach /John Tobin -- The Jurisprudence of Making Decisions Affecting Children: An Argument to Prefer Duty to Children’s Rights and Welfare /Lucinda Ferguson -- Michael Freeman’s Contribution to Childhood Rights /Mark Henaghan -- Michael Freeman’s View of Children’s Rights and Some Ideas Arising from His Views /Priscilla Alderson -- What if Children Had Been Involved in Drafting the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child? /Laura Lundy , Elizabeth Welty , Beth Blue Swadener , Natasha Blanchet-Cohen , Kylie Smith and Dympna Devine -- Ending Corporal Punishment in Childhood: Advancing Children’s Rights to Dignity and Respectful Treatment /Bernadette J. Saunders -- Reflections on Michael Freeman’s ‘Law and Order in 1984’ /Robert Reiner -- Children’s Rights and Children’s Criminal Responsibility /Heather Keating -- Michael Freeman and Domestic Violence /Helen Reece -- The Spirit and the Corruption of Cricket /Peter Alldridge -- Children’s Rights: Preventing the Use of State Care and Preventing Care Proceedings /Judith Masson -- Michael Freeman and the Rights and Wrongs of Resolving Private Law Disputes /Felicity Kaganas and Christine Piper -- Best Interests of the Child in Relocation: The Work and Views of Lawyers in England and Wales /Ghislaine Lanteigne -- Surrogacy Law: From Piecemeal Tweaks to Sustained Review and Reform /Amel Alghrani , Danielle Griffiths and Margaret Brazier -- The Right to Responsible Parents? Making Decisions about the Healthcare of Young and Dependent Children /Jo Bridgeman -- The Abuse of Parents by Children /Jonathan Herring -- An Unnatural Union? – British Conservatism and the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013 /Andrew Gilbert -- The Family Law World of Michael Freeman /Sanford N. Katz -- The Contribution of the South African Constitutional Court to the Jurisprudential Development of the Best Interests of the Child /Meda Couzens -- Assisted Reproduction and the Child’s Right to Know His or Her Origins: Sweden’s Response to Its International Law Obligations and New Challenges Raised by Surrogacy /Jane Stoll -- Sometimes as a Child, Sometimes as an Adult: Children and Access to Justice in Italy /Maria Federica Moscati -- The Application of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child in Dutch Legal Practice /Coby de Graaf -- Michael Freeman and International Family Justice /The Rt. Hon. Sir Mathew Thorpe -- Thirty Years of the Hague Abduction Convention: A Children’s Rights Perspective /Rhona Schuz.This collection, written by legal scholars from around the world, offers insights into a variety of topics from children’s rights to criminal law, jurisprudence, medical ethics and more. Its breadth reflects the fact that these are all elements of what can broadly be called ‘law and society’, that enterprise that is interested in law’s place or influence in diffferent aspects of real lives and understands law to be simultaneously symbol, philosophy and action. It is also testament to the broad range of vision of Professor Michael Freeman, in whose honour the volume was conceived. The contributions are divided into categories which reflect his distinguished career and publications, over 85 books and countless articles, including pioneering work on children’s rights, domestic violence, religious law, jurisprudence, law and culture, family law and medicine, ethics and the law, as well as his enduring commitment to interdisciplinarity. The volume begins with work on law in its philosophical, cultural or symbolic realm (Part I: Law and Stories: Culture, Religion and Philosophy), including its commitment to the normative ideal of ‘rights’ (Part II: Law and Rights), and then offfers work on law as coercive state action (Part III: Law and the Coercive State) and as regulator of personal relationships (Part IV: Law and Personal Living). It continues with reflections on the importance of globalisation, both of law and of ‘doing family’ in personal and public life (Part V: Law and International Living) before closing with two reflections on Michael Freeman’s body of work generally, including one from Michael himself (Part VI: Law and Michael Freeman).LawSocial aspectsChildren's rightsChildrenLegal status, laws, etcFestschriften.LawSocial aspects.Children's rights.ChildrenLegal status, laws, etc.323Freeman Michael D. A1493565Diduck Alison1580201Peleg Noam1580202Reece Helen1539451NL-LeKBNL-LeKBBOOK9910797583203321Law in society3860945UNINA