Feminist perspectives on child law

書誌事項

Feminist perspectives on child law

edited by Jo Bridgeman, Daniel Monk

Cavendish, 2000

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 6

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注記

Bibliography: p. 295-324

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Feminist Perspectives on Child Law is a collection of interdisciplinary socio-legal essays which explore the complex relationship between childhood,gender and the law. Drawing on a wide range of feminist and critical theories and empirical research, these original essays challenge the gender neutrality of law; they explore the shifting constructions of childhood by law, legal practice and popular culture; and they provide critical and timely insights into the complex relationship between adults and children. The essays go beyond the traditional boundaries of child law within the law school curriculum and within legal practice by addressing a wide range of issues, such as health, criminal justice, education, sexuality and domestic violence. By approaching these issues in innovative ways, the essays question the impact of gender on social and cultural understandings of childhood and on contemporary interpretations of child welfare and give voice to the different choices and experiences of male and female children.

目次

  • Introduction
  • Feminsim and child law
  • Children by donation
  • Constructions of maternity and motherhood in stories of lost children
  • Divorcing the Children
  • Anxious parenthood, the vulnerable child and the good father
  • Contact and domestic violence
  • Governing bad girls
  • Legal,protected and timely
  • Education law/ Educating gender
  • Embodying our hopes and fears?
  • Feminism and children's rights
  • Solicitors and legal subjects
  • How the UN stole childhood.

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