1st Edition

Feminist Perspectives on Family Law

Edited By Alison Diduck, Katherine O'Donovan Copyright 2007
    284 Pages
    by Routledge-Cavendish

    284 Pages
    by Routledge-Cavendish

    Examining specific areas of family law from a feminist perspective, this book assesses the impact that feminism has had upon family law. It is deliberately broad in scope, as it takes the view that family law cannot be defined in a traditional way. In addition to issues of long-standing concern for feminists, it explores issues of current legal and political preoccupation such as civil partnerships, home-sharing, reproductive technologies and new initiatives in regulating family practices through criminal law, including domestic violence and youth justice.

    1. Introduction: Feminism and Families Plus Ca Change?  2. Family Friendly?: Rights, Responsibilities and Relationship Recognition  3. Shared Households: A New Paradigm for Thinking about the Reform of Domestic Property Relations  4. What is a Parent?  5. Parents in Law: Subjective Impacts and Status Implications Around the Use of Licensed Donor Insemination  6. After Birth: Decisions about Becoming a Mother  7. The Ethic of Justice Strikes Back: Changing Narratives of Fatherhood  8. Domestic Violence, Men’s Groups and the Equivalence Argument  9. Feminist Perspectives on Youth Justice  10. Working Towards Credit for Parenting: A Consideration of Tax Credits as a Feminist Enterprise  11. 'The Branch on Which We Sit': Multiculturalism, Minority Women and Family Law  12. Feminist Legal Studies and the Subject(s) of Men: Questions of Text, Terrain and Context in the Politics of Family Law and Gender

    Biography

    Alison Diduck is based in the Faculty of Laws, UCL. Katherine O'Donovan is at the Department of Law, Queen Mary, University of London.

    "This books is very readable and thorougly engaging, covering a range of the issues one would expect in a collection of this sort. It is an invaluable resource for students and researchers alike and a timely and welcome addition to family law scholarship." - Julie Wallbank, Feminist Legal Studies, Vol 16 No.2, (2008)