Trauma-Informed Lawyering: Practicing Emotional Acknowledgment
Date
2023-02-16
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
ORCID
0000-0002-5353-0502
Type
Thesis
Degree Level
Masters
Abstract
This thesis seeks to improve the lives of lawyers and people who use legal systems by exploring complex human needs which can be masked, ignored, and even infringed upon by the legal system. As such, trauma-informed lawyering skills requires a commitment not just to the acquisition of skills, but also to the embodiment and practice of these skills with one’s self as much as with others. This thesis seeks to illustrate how fragmentation and disconnection of the self from one’s emotions impairs, rather than improves the lawyer’s ability to advocate in the best interests of their clients. The true integration and internalization of such trauma-informed and emotional acknowledgment skills is a process that invites transformative change.
In order to achieve these outcomes, it is necessary to have a basic understanding of what trauma is, including its history and prevalence. Two types of trauma, intergenerational trauma and indirect trauma, will be discussed. The legal sector’s connection to trauma – the way that trauma is embedded in legal practice - will be explored, with a focus on experiences of emotional suppression and detachment and how these can exacerbate trauma in legal work. The consequences of emotional suppression and detachment are also discussed along with recommendations for individual lawyers to address these. To benefit clients and lawyers, trauma-informed practice must become a mandatory dimension of legal work, rather than an optional skillset. Turning to the organizational level of legal practice, the current efforts of law societies to educate on trauma-informed practice are explored and analyzed. Although progress has been made, including the Université de Sherbrooke’s Phase I Research Report surveying the psychological health determinants of legal professionals in Canada, more needs to be done to prepare lawyers to better respond to the challenges embedded in their work, and the impact on their own internal emotional lives. The thesis concludes with recommendations for organizations such as interdisciplinary research on trauma in law and creating accountability for how legal employers impact or exacerbate lawyers’ mental health. Recommendations for future research on this topic include actively measuring the impacts of legal culture and legal systems as well as adjusting the priorities of such research towards well-being and social improvements rather than focusing solely on economic or productivity levels.
Description
Keywords
trauma-informed, trauma, emotions, emotional acknowledgment, emotional detachment, emotional suppression, law, lawyer, professional duty, empathy, mental health in law, mental health, legal culture, psychological distress
Citation
Degree
Master of Laws (LL.M.)
Department
Law
Program
Law