Gender and justice
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Gender and justice
(The international library of essays in law and legal theory, 2nd ser.)
Ashgate/Dartmouth, c2002
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Note
Facsimile reprint of articles
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The leading articles on gender and justice within Anglo-American legal theory are assembled in this volume. The essays are drawn primarily from the writings of lawyers working in the common law tradition and they mainly examine the justice of legal institutions. Due to the close kinship between political and legal theories of justice, the book also includes a selection of the work of the more prominent political theorists of justice and gender.
Table of Contents
- I: The Subject of Justice
- [1]: Gender as Seriality: Thinking about Women as a Social Collective
- [2]: The Woman of Legal Discourse
- [3]: proof
- [4]: Liberal Jurisprudence and Abstracted Visions of Human Nature: A Feminist Critique of Rawls' Theory of Justice
- [5]: "Public Man" and the Critique of Masculinities
- II: The Limits of Formal Equality
- [6]: Something is Pushing them to the Side of their Own Lives: 1 A Feminist Critique of Law and Laws
- [7]: Possession: Erotic Love in the Law of Rape
- [8]: Women and the Law of Armed Conflict: Why the Silence?
- [9]: The Equality Pit or the Rehabilitation of Justice
- III: Distributive Justice
- [10]: More Than 100 Million Women Are Missing
- [11]: Preface 2001
- [12]: Theories of Justice and the Welfare State
- [13]: After the Family Wage: A Postindustrial Thought Experiment
- IV: The Qualities of Judgement
- Impartiality
- [14]: Stripped Down Like a Runner or Enriched by Experience: Bias and Impartiality of Judges and Jurors
- Care
- [15]: Portia in a Different Voice: Speculations on a Women's Lawyering Process
- [16]: Justice and Care
- Emotion
- [17]: Reconstructing Judgment: Emotion and Moral Judgment
- [18]: Embodied Diversity and the Challenges to Law
- V: Just Punishment
- [19]: Criminal Justice Ideologies and Practices in Different Voices: Some Feminist Questions about Justice
- [20]: Punishment, Feminism, and Political Identity: A Case Study in the Expressive Meaning of the Law
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