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Fifty Years in Family Law

Essays for Stephen Cretney

Book | 1st edition 2012 | United Kingdom | Rebecca Probert, Chris Barton
Description

Stephen Cretney has long been regarded as the leading English scholar in the field of family law, as prolific as he is profound. From textbooks that provided guidance to generations of students to the crowning achievement of Family Law in the Twentieth Century: A History, his writing has always been a model of elegance and erudition. Even if the essays in this book had not been written in his honour, they would inevitably have had to rely heavily on his work. Private ordering, marriage, civil partnership, cohabitation, children, separation, divorce – the entire spectrum of family law is covered here – have all benefited from his insightful comments and meticulous scholarship. What also became apparent from the rush of judges and academics (including both established and up-and-coming researchers) wanting to contribute to this work is the equally high personal regard in which Stephen Cretney is held by his – for want of a better word – ‘peers’. This book is a labour of love.

With a foreword by Nicholas Wilson and contributions by Andrew Bainham, Chris Barton, Elizabeth Cooke, Ruth Deech, Gillian Douglas, John Eekelaar, Stephen Gilmore, Brenda Hale, Sonia Harris-Short, Joanna Harwood, Jonathan Herring, Sue Jenkinson, Sanford N. Katz, Penny Lewis, Nigel Lowe, Mavis Maclean, Judith Masson, Joanna Miles, Walter Pintens, Christine Piper, Rebecca Probert, Neil Robinson, Simon Rowbotham, and Jens M. Scherpe.


About the book
‘[a] fascinating volume that provides an interesting perspective on where family law has come from, and where it is going.’
Claire Simmonds in Cambridge Law Journal (2012) 734

‘It would be unsurprising if its chapters, distinctly readable and pithy as well as learned, are still being read and cited by family lawyers 50 years from now.’
Brian Sloan in Child and Family Law Quarterly (2012) 496

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Technical info
More Information
Type of product Book
Format Hardback
EAN / ISSN 9781780680521
Weight 743 g
Status Available
Number of pages xviii + 332 p.
Access to exercice No
Publisher Intersentia
Language English
Publication Date Mar 21, 2012
Available on Jurisquare No
Available on Strada Belgique No
Available on Strada Europe No
Available on Strada Luxembourg No
Chapters

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  • Table of Contents
  • Introduction
    Rebecca Probert, Chris Barton
  • Collective Responsibility: Law Reform at the Law Commission
    Brenda Hale of Richmond
  • A Paean for the Law Commission: A View from the Inside
    Joanna Harwood, Penny Lewis
  • In the Matter of Cretney v. Bromley (1974): Stephen Cretney’s Principles of Family Law
    Simon Rowbotham
  • ‘Why Should They Cite Us?’: Lessons from an ‘Uncommon’ Family Lawyer’s Influence on the Common Law
    Stephen Gilmore
  • Child Focused Legislation: For the Sake of the Children?
    Christine Piper
  • The Illegitimacy Saga
    Andrew Bainham
  • Marital Agreements: ‘The More Radical Solution’
    Joanna K. Miles
  • Buggers and Broomers: Have They ‘Been Practising Long Enough’?
    Chris Barton
  • Civil Rites
    Rebecca Probert
  • Towards a Matrimonial Property Regime for England and Wales?
    Jens Scherpe
  • Holding Onto the Past? Adoption, Birth Parents and the Law in the Twenty-First Century
    Sonia Harris-Short
  • Inherently Disposed to Protect Children: the Continuing Role of Wardship
    Nigel Lowe
  • The Law of Succession: Doing the Best We Can
    Elizabeth Cooke
  • Divorce, Internet Hubs and Stephen Cretney
    Jonathan Herring
  • The Co-Respondent’s Role in Divorce Reform after 1923
    Sue Jenkinson
  • Simple Quarrels? Autonomy vs. Vulnerability
    Gillian Douglas
  • Shapeshifters or Polymaths? A Reflection on the Discipline of the Family Mediator in Stephen Cretney’s World of Private Ordering
    Neil Robinson
  • Family Law – What Family Law?
    John Eekelaar
  • Regulating the Bar
    Ruth Deech
  • A Failed Revolution: Judicial Case Management of Care Proceedings
    Judith M. Masson
  • Openness and Transparency in the Family Courts: A Policy
    Mavis Maclean
  • Fifty Years in the Transformation of American Family Law: 1960–2011
    Sanford N. Katz
  • A Royal and Constitutional Affair: the Second Marriage of H.M. King Leopold III of the Belgians
    Walter Pintens
  • Index