Synopses & Reviews
Conflict and controversy usually accompany major social changes in America. Such issues as civil rights, abortion, and the proposed Equal Rights Amendment provoke strong and divisive reactions, attract extensive media coverage, and generate heated legislative debate. Some theorists even claim that only mobilization and publicity can stimulate significant legislative change. How is it possible, then, that a wholesale revamping of American divorce law occurred with scarcely a whisper of controversy and without any national debate? This is the central question posed—and authoritatively answered—in Herbert Jacob's
Silent Revolution.Since 1966, divorce laws in the United States have undergone a radical transformation. No-fault divorce is now universally available. Alimony functions simply as a brief transitional payment to help a dependent spouse become independent. Most states divide assets at divorce according to a community property scheme, and, whenever possible, many courts prefer to award custody of children to the mother and the father jointly.
These changes in policy represent a profound departure from traditional American values, and yet the legislation by which they were enacted was treated as a technical correction of minor problems. No-fault divorce, for example, was a response to the increasing number of fraudulent divorce petitions. Since couples were often forced to manufacture the evidence of guilt that many states required, and since judges frequently looked the other way, legal reformers sought no more than to bring divorce statutes into line with current practice.
On the basis of such observations, Jacob formulates a new theory of routine—as opposed to conflictual—policy-making processes. Many potentially controversial policies—divorce law reforms among them—pass unnoticed in America because legislators treat them as matters of routine. Jacob's is indeed the most plausible account of the enormous number and steady flow of policy decisions made by state legislatures. It also explains why no attention was paid to the effect divorce reform would have on divorced women and their children, a subject that has become increasingly controversial and that, consequently, is not likely to be handled by the routine policy-making process in the future.
About the Author
Herbert Jacob is professor of political science at Northwestern University. He is the author or editor of over a dozen monographs and textbooks, including Felony Justice (with James Eisenstein) and The Frustration of Policy: Responses to Crime by American Cities.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction: The Silent Revolution
2. Social Conditions and Family Change
3. Breaking the Logjam of Divorce Law Revision: New York
4. California's Bold Step
5. Nationalizing No-Fault Divorce: The NCCUSL
6. The Vagaries of Diffusion
7. The Transformation of Property at Divorce
8. What Should Happen to the Children?
9. The Consequences of Divorce Law Change
10. Routine Policy Making and Divorce
Appendix
Notes
Index