The chapter deals with humanism in law. Humanism as a philosophical approach focusing on human being and accepting every person with all its good and bad characteristics, emphasizing the equality of all human beings and believing in ability of every person to self-development and becoming who he/she really is, may find its expression also in judicial decision making if the judge himself/herself has humanistic view of the world.
If we accept behavioral approcha to law, why not also humanistic approach to law as a second from three fundamental approaches in psychotherapy (together with psychoanalysis)?