Each year more than 2 million Americans get divorced, and most of them use a lawyer. In closed-door conversations between lawyers and their clients strategy is planned, tactics are devised, and the emotional climate of the divorce is established. Do lawyers contribute to the pain and emotional difficulty of divorce by escalating demands and encouraging unreasonable behavior? Do they take advantage of clients at a time of emotional difficulty? Can and should clients trust their lawyers to look out for their welfare and advance their long-term interests? Austin Sarat and William L. F. Felstiner's new book, based on a pioneering and intensive study of actual conferences between divorce lawyers and their clients, provides an unprecedented behind-the-scenes description of the lawyer-client relationship, and calls into question much of the conventional wisdom about what divorce lawyers actually do. Divorce Lawyers and Their Clients suggests that most divorces are marked less by a pattern of aggressive advocacy than by one of inaction and drift. It uncovers reasons why lawyers find divorce practice frustrating and difficult and why clients frequently feel dissatisfied with their lawyers. This new work provides a unique perspective on the dynamics of professionalism. It charts the complex and shifting ways lawyers and clients "negotiate" their relationship as they work out the strategy and tactics of divorce. Sarat and Felstiner show how both lawyers and clients are able to draw on resources of power to set the agenda of their interaction, while neither one is fully in charge. Rather, power shifts between the two parties; where it is achieved, power is found in the ability to have one's understandings of the social and legal worlds of divorce accepted. Power then works through the creation of shared meanings. Divorce Lawyers and Their Clients examines the effort to create such shared meanings about the nature of marriage and why marriages fail, the operation of the legal process, and the best way to bring divorces to closure. It will be fascinating reading for anyone who is going through a divorce, or has gone through one, as well as for lawyers, judges, and scholars of law and society.
This guide presents a step-by-step program for learning how to create successful relationships with the client .
Letters for Divorce Lawyers: Essential Communications for Clients, Opposing Counsel, and Others
This book will also educate you about what you will likely face and the added bonus of eliminating your fear of the unknown.
Pearson (1993: 282) found two-attorney representation in only 32 percent of divorces with children in Los Angeles County in 1990. 4. In our sample of lawyers, those reporting largely upper-middle-class clients faced pro se opponents in ...
This is a must read for any woman considering divorce or caught in the divorce process.
The 125 Questions Every Woman Should Ask Margery Rubin. =< He who rejects change is the architect ofdecay. The only human institution which rejects progress is the cemetery. —harold wilson =< hoW caN i Make this easier oN MY kiDs?
“If you had to give divorce advice to your best friend, what would you say?”The question intrigued me.
Quick Prep: Divorce Proceedings in New York highlights key stages in the process of preparing a strategy for a divorce case in New York.
This is a must read for anyone considering divorce or caught in the divorce process.
This book is easy to use. It is arranged in the natural order of the divorce experience.