April 26, 2016

Patrick on Insights from the Behaviorial Sciences on Law and Emotions

Carlton Patrick, University of Miami Department of Psychology, has published A New Synthesis for Law and Emotions: Insights from the Behavioral Sciences at 47 Arizona State Law Journal 1239 (2015). Here is the abstract.
The business of the law is to influence human behavior. To do this effectively, lawmakers must make assumptions about human psychology and how people think. While the behavioral sciences dedicate their entire enterprises to investigating these questions, the law, even at its best, incorporates knowledge from those disciplines in a fragmentary and unsystematic fashion. At its worst, the legal system overlooks or ignores advances in other fields and instead relies on inherited intuitions of behavior that can be both naive and difficult to enumerate with precision. Nowhere is this phenomenon more evident than in the law’s longstanding struggle with emotions, where attempts to codify, incorporate, explain, and otherwise reckon with our feelings have produced many of the law’s most nebulous and imprecise concepts. Using insights from the modern behavioral sciences, especially those informed by an evolutionary approach to human behavior, this article attempts to inform a legal analysis of emotions and address many of the unsettled questions of the Law and Emotions movement.
Download the article from SSRN at the link.

No comments: