Discusses holistic law, a new approach to resolving legal conflict.
Comparison to the adversarial type of legal practice symbolized by
lawyers like Harvard University's Alan Dershowitz; Comments from holistic
advocates Ruth A. Synder and David G. Mawn; Additional
observations.
By
PT Staff, published on May 01, 1993
HOLISTIC LAW
THEY'RE NOT CALLED BOMBERS for nothing--high-powered lawyers
ritualistically obliterating the other side. Head of the squadron may be
Harvard's Alan Dershowitz, elevated by book and film (Reversal of
Fortune) into the pantheon of American heroes in the litigious
'80s.
Critics believe their high fees and cut-throat tactics have
themselves become in. justices. Lately, the excesses of the adversarial
system are troubling increasing numbers of their own.
Enter holistic law, a new approach to resolving legal conflict.
Much like the movement in medicine, the holistic approach to law treats
the client as a whole, considers mental, emotional, and spiritual as well
as physical aspects. Lawyers view themselves less like hired guns than as
helping hands.
"The legal system needs to be a part of the healing process--not
the baseball bat you use to inflict pain on someone else," say holistic
advocates Ruth A. Snyder and David G. Mawn. Though adversarial tactics
are preached in law schools, they would replace the bitter win-or-lose of
the courtroom with a win/win approach.
Holistic law takes effort by client as well as lawyer. Lawyers need
to keep clients informed every step of the way. Clients have to fully
share their problems and insist that all legal options be explained
thoroughly. It's a matter of the clients taking control and demanding
that lawyers understand and explain, says Mawn, staff attorney for the
Appalachian Research and Defense Fund in Barbourville, Kentucky. "The
lawyer has to stop being the parent and the client stop being the
child."
Once lawyer and client are a team, they can figure out what the
client really wants and the best way to get it. That rarely means nailing
the other guy. Practicing holistic law, with clients' Personal needs at
heart, lawyers more likely reach settlements that satisfy both
parties-and keep court (and costs) at bay.
Originally a warrior lawyer specializing in divorce, Ruth Snyder
converted to holism when she realized how often divorce rulings generate
unnecessary bitterness in an already bleeding family. Rather than go for
the jugular, she tries to reach custody agreements a mother and father
can both live with. Member of a Peoria, Illinois, law firm, she sees
holistic law also for bankruptcy, debt collection, and landlord/tenant
disputes.
People typically feel "lawyers are conniving pit bulls--unless
they're working for me," observes Mawn. He hopes law will change how it
teaches and clients change their expectations. After all, lawyers should
serve justice.
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