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Law, Society, Policy

Series Editor: Rosie Harding, University of Birmingham

Law, Society, Policy offers an outlet for high quality, socio-legal research monographs and edited collections with the potential for policy impact.

Cutting across the traditional divides of legal scholarship, the series provides an interdisciplinary, policy engaged approach to socio-legal research which explores law in its social and political contexts with a particular focus on the place of law in everyday life. It takes an explicitly society-first view of socio-legal studies, with a focus on the ways that law shapes social life, and the constitutive nature of law and society.

The series is international in scope, engaging with domestic, international and global legal and regulatory frameworks. It is open to scholars engaging with any area of law, provided their focus is grounded in social and policy concerns.

International Advisory Board:

  • Dr Lynette Chua, National University of Singapore, Singapore
  • Professor Margaret Davies, Flinders University, Australia
  • Professor Martha Fineman, Emory University, US
  • Professor Marc Hertogh, University of Groningen, The Netherlands
  • Professor Fiona Kelly, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia
  • Professor Fiona de Londras, University of Birmingham, UK
  • Dr Anna Mäki-Petäjä-Leinonen, University of Eastern Finland, Finland
  • Professor Ambreena Manji, Cardiff University, UK
  • Professor Linda Mulcahy, University of Oxford, UK
  • Professor Vanessa Munro, University of Warwick, UK
  • Professor Debra Parkes, University of British Columbia, Canada
  • Dr Antu Sorainen, University of Helsinki, Finland
  • Professor Dee Smythe, University of Cape Town, South Africa
  • Professor Michael Thomson, ‘University of Leeds, UK and University of Technology Sydney, Australia
  • Dr Bridgette Toy-Cronin, University of Otago, New Zealand
  • Dr Lisa Vanhala, University College London, UK


A message from the series editor:


Call for proposals

If you would like to submit a proposal, or to discuss ideas, then please contact the series editor, Rosie Harding r.j.harding@bham.ac.uk

Showing 13-13 of 13 items.

Children’s Voices, Family Disputes and Child-Inclusive Mediation

The Right to Be Heard

ePDF and ePUB available Open Access under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. Considered from a children’s rights perspective, this book provides a critical socio-legal account of child-inclusive mediation (CIM) practice. It draws on interviews with relationship professionals, mediators, parents and children to consider the risks and benefits of CIM.

Bristol Uni Press