Logo image
What's in a Name?  Family, Identity and Social Obligation
Journal article   Peer reviewed

What's in a Name? Family, Identity and Social Obligation

J. Goodie and T. Summerfield
University of Western Sydney Law Review, Vol.6(1), pp.209-221
2002
url
Free to Read *No subscription requiredView

Abstract

What’s in a name? This is an article about how naming, in law as in other fields of the social sciences, makes possible ways of thinking and acting, underwriting social norms. Essentially, it is not an article about the philosophy of language but a paper about the connotations of law and how this links to the nature and performance of social obligation. We ask the question, does family law, as currently framed in Australia, reflect the nature of social obligation? In suggesting that it does not, we argue that family law firstly, limits possibilities for alternative family models which are developed on notions of social obligation as opposed to traditional notions of familial relationship and secondly, establishes a hierarchy of relationship legitimacy. We proceed to suggest ways in which law can best be framed to reflect the nature, as opposed to forms, of domestically based relationship.

Details

Metrics

44 Record Views
Logo image