What is right for children? : the competing paradigms of religion and human rights

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What is right for children? : the competing paradigms of religion and human rights

edited by Martha Albertson Fineman, Karen Worthington

Ashgate, c2009

Available at  / 10 libraries

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Bibliography: p. [389]-437

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Combining feminist legal theory with international human rights concepts, this book examines the presence, participation and treatment of children in a variety of contexts. Specifically, through comparing legal developments in the US with legal developments in countries where the views that children are separate from their families and potentially in need of state protection are more widely accepted. The authors address the role of religion in shaping attitudes about parental rights in the US, with particular emphasis upon the fundamentalist belief in natural lines of familial authority. Such beliefs have provoked powerful resistance in the US to human rights approaches that view the child as an independent rights holder and the state as obligated to proved services and protections that are distinctly child-centred. Calling for a rebalancing of relationships within the US family, to become more consistent with emerging human rights norms, this collection contains both theoretical debates about and practical approaches to granting positive rights to children.

Table of Contents

  • Contents: Introduction: what is right for children?, Martha Albertson Fineman
  • Part I Children's Rights as Human Rights: The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child: empowering parents to protect their children's rights, Barbara Bennett Woodhouse and Kathryn A. Johnson
  • Child, family, state and gender equality in religious stances and human rights instruments: a preliminary comparison, Linda C. McClain
  • Rhetoric, religion and human rights: 'save the children!', Barbara Stark
  • Feminist fundamentalism on the frontier between government and family responsibility for children, Mary Ann Case. Part II Children in the United States: the Legal Context: Using international human rights law in US courts: lessons from the campaign against the juvenile death penalty, Linda M. Keller
  • The lesser culpability of the juvenile offender: trial in adult criminal court, incarceration with adults, and excessive sanctions, Bernadine Dohrn
  • Parental rights doctrine: creating and maintaining maternal value, Annette R. Appell
  • Placing children in context: parents, foster care, and poverty, Naomi Cahn
  • Expanding the parent-child-state triangle in public family law: the role of private providers, Susan Vivian Mangold
  • Advocating for children's rights in a lawless nation: articulating rights for foster children, Barbara Bennett Woodhouse and Brooke Hardy
  • A proposal for collaborative enforcement of a federal right to education, Kimberley Jenkins Robinson
  • Taking children's interests seriously, Martha Albertson Fineman. Part III Comparisons: Children Within the Context of Human Rights: Introduction
  • The child's right to religious freedom in international law: the search for meaning, Ursula Kilkelly
  • Clashing rights and welfare: a return to a rights discourse in family law in the UK?, Shazia Choudhry
  • Accommodating children's religious expression in public schools: a comparative analysis of the veil and other symbols in Western democracies, Catherine J. Ross
  • Children, education, and rights in a society divided by religion: the perspectives of children and young people, Laura Lundy
  • Children, international human rights, and the politics of belonging, Alice Hearst
  • The right of children to be loved, S. Matthew Liao
  • Appendix
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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