Right, gender and family law
edited by Julie Wallbank, Shazia Choudhry, and Jonathan Herring.
- Oxon : Routledge, 2010.
- 292 p.
Table of contents: Chapter 1. Welfare, rights, care and gender in family law Chapter 2. Gender, rights, responsibilities, and social policy Chapter 3. Child protection, gender, and rights Chapter 4. Rights and responsibility: girls and boys who behave badly Chapter 5. (En)gendering the fusion of rights and responsibilities in the law of contact Chapter 6. Fatherhood, law, and fathers' rights: rethinking the relationship between gender and welfare Chapter 7. Mandatory prosecution and arrest as a form of compliance with due diligence duties in domestic violence -- the gender implications Chapter 8. The limitations of equality discourses on the contours of intimate obligations Chapter 9. Public norms and private lives: rights, fairness and family law Chapter 10. The identification of parents and siblings: new possibilities under the reformed Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act Chapter 11. Children with exceptional needs: welfare, rights and caring responsibilities Chapter 12. Relational autonomy and family law Chapter 13. Concluding thoughts: the enduring chaos of family law