New Perspectives on European Women's Legal History
Herausgeber: Kimble, Sara L; Röwekamp, Marion
New Perspectives on European Women's Legal History
Herausgeber: Kimble, Sara L; Röwekamp, Marion
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This volume brings historical analysis to bear on the issue of gender and the law, providing a comprehensive overview of European women's legal history and contributing to new insights to the fields of legal studies, women's studies, and modern European history.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Women's Legal Strategies in Canada67,99 €
- After Legal Equality50,99 €
- Paul JohnsonHomosexuality and the European Court of Human Rights74,99 €
- Indigenous Legal Judgments61,99 €
- Queer Theory77,99 €
- Women's Health and the Limits of Law61,99 €
- Gender in Refugee Law69,99 €
-
-
-
This volume brings historical analysis to bear on the issue of gender and the law, providing a comprehensive overview of European women's legal history and contributing to new insights to the fields of legal studies, women's studies, and modern European history.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 452
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. März 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 626g
- ISBN-13: 9780367263980
- ISBN-10: 036726398X
- Artikelnr.: 56925086
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 452
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. März 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 24mm
- Gewicht: 626g
- ISBN-13: 9780367263980
- ISBN-10: 036726398X
- Artikelnr.: 56925086
Sara L. Kimble is a historian at DePaul University in Chicago, Illinois. Marion Röwekamp is Feodor Lynen Fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation at UNAM and the Colegio de México in Mexico City.
Preface
[Ute Gerhard and Karen Offen]
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Legal Cultures and Communities of Female Protest in Modern
European History, 1860-1960s
[Sara L. Kimble and Marion Röwekamp]
Part I: Gender and Family Law
1. Adaptation, Emulation, or Tradition?: Greek Family Law and the Courts in
the First Decades of the Modern Greek State
[Evdoxios Doxiadis]
2. Family Law, Legal Reforms, Female Lawyers and Feminist Claims in Spain,
1868-1950
[Gloria Nielfa]
3. Democracy at Home: Debating Family and Marriage Law in the First
Czechoslovak Republic, 1918-1938
[Melissa Feinberg]
4. Equality at Stake: Legal and National Discourses on Family Law in
Czechoslovakia, 1918-1931
[Jana Osterkamp]
Part II: Women in the Legal Professions
5. The Rise of "Modern Portias": Feminist Legal Activism in Republican
France, 1890s-1940s
[Sara L. Kimble]
6. Women and the Courts in Twentieth-Century Belgium: An Historical
Perspective
[Eva Schandevyl]
7. The First Lawyers and Attorneys: The Struggle for Professional
Recognition of Women's Rights in Yugoslavia, 1918-1953
[Gordana Stojakovi¿]
8. Bulgarian Women in Legal Education and the Legal Profession During the
First Half of the Twentieth Century
[Krassimira Daskalova]
9. "The Napoleonic Civil Code is to Blame for My Decision to Study Law":
Female Polish Law Students and Lawyers in the Second Polish Republic
(1918-1939)
[Iwona Dadej]
10. Women, Equal Rights and the Legal Profession in Germany, 1895-1933
[Marion Röwekamp]
11. Feminism and Criminology in Britain, 1910-1950
[Anne Logan]
12. Attempting to Advocate: Women Entering the Legal Profession in Finland,
1885-1915
[Mia Korpiola]
Part III: Transnational and International Intersections
13. Tracking Feminist Interventions in International Law Issues at the
League of Nations: From the Nationality of Married Women to Legal Equality
in the Family, 1919-1970
[Catherine Jacques]
14. "Who Belongs" or the Question of Women's Citizenship in Switzerland
Since 1798
[Regina Wecker]
15. Legal Position of Women in Portugal: The Case of the Standing Committee
on Legislation of the National Council of Portuguese Women (CNMP),
1914-1947
[Anne Cova]
16. Night Work for White Women and Bonded Labour for "Native" Women?:
Contentious Traditions and the Globalization of Gender-Specific Labour
Protection and Legal Equality Politics, 1926 to 1939
[Susan Zimmermann]
[Ute Gerhard and Karen Offen]
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Legal Cultures and Communities of Female Protest in Modern
European History, 1860-1960s
[Sara L. Kimble and Marion Röwekamp]
Part I: Gender and Family Law
1. Adaptation, Emulation, or Tradition?: Greek Family Law and the Courts in
the First Decades of the Modern Greek State
[Evdoxios Doxiadis]
2. Family Law, Legal Reforms, Female Lawyers and Feminist Claims in Spain,
1868-1950
[Gloria Nielfa]
3. Democracy at Home: Debating Family and Marriage Law in the First
Czechoslovak Republic, 1918-1938
[Melissa Feinberg]
4. Equality at Stake: Legal and National Discourses on Family Law in
Czechoslovakia, 1918-1931
[Jana Osterkamp]
Part II: Women in the Legal Professions
5. The Rise of "Modern Portias": Feminist Legal Activism in Republican
France, 1890s-1940s
[Sara L. Kimble]
6. Women and the Courts in Twentieth-Century Belgium: An Historical
Perspective
[Eva Schandevyl]
7. The First Lawyers and Attorneys: The Struggle for Professional
Recognition of Women's Rights in Yugoslavia, 1918-1953
[Gordana Stojakovi¿]
8. Bulgarian Women in Legal Education and the Legal Profession During the
First Half of the Twentieth Century
[Krassimira Daskalova]
9. "The Napoleonic Civil Code is to Blame for My Decision to Study Law":
Female Polish Law Students and Lawyers in the Second Polish Republic
(1918-1939)
[Iwona Dadej]
10. Women, Equal Rights and the Legal Profession in Germany, 1895-1933
[Marion Röwekamp]
11. Feminism and Criminology in Britain, 1910-1950
[Anne Logan]
12. Attempting to Advocate: Women Entering the Legal Profession in Finland,
1885-1915
[Mia Korpiola]
Part III: Transnational and International Intersections
13. Tracking Feminist Interventions in International Law Issues at the
League of Nations: From the Nationality of Married Women to Legal Equality
in the Family, 1919-1970
[Catherine Jacques]
14. "Who Belongs" or the Question of Women's Citizenship in Switzerland
Since 1798
[Regina Wecker]
15. Legal Position of Women in Portugal: The Case of the Standing Committee
on Legislation of the National Council of Portuguese Women (CNMP),
1914-1947
[Anne Cova]
16. Night Work for White Women and Bonded Labour for "Native" Women?:
Contentious Traditions and the Globalization of Gender-Specific Labour
Protection and Legal Equality Politics, 1926 to 1939
[Susan Zimmermann]
Preface
[Ute Gerhard and Karen Offen]
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Legal Cultures and Communities of Female Protest in Modern
European History, 1860-1960s
[Sara L. Kimble and Marion Röwekamp]
Part I: Gender and Family Law
1. Adaptation, Emulation, or Tradition?: Greek Family Law and the Courts in
the First Decades of the Modern Greek State
[Evdoxios Doxiadis]
2. Family Law, Legal Reforms, Female Lawyers and Feminist Claims in Spain,
1868-1950
[Gloria Nielfa]
3. Democracy at Home: Debating Family and Marriage Law in the First
Czechoslovak Republic, 1918-1938
[Melissa Feinberg]
4. Equality at Stake: Legal and National Discourses on Family Law in
Czechoslovakia, 1918-1931
[Jana Osterkamp]
Part II: Women in the Legal Professions
5. The Rise of "Modern Portias": Feminist Legal Activism in Republican
France, 1890s-1940s
[Sara L. Kimble]
6. Women and the Courts in Twentieth-Century Belgium: An Historical
Perspective
[Eva Schandevyl]
7. The First Lawyers and Attorneys: The Struggle for Professional
Recognition of Women's Rights in Yugoslavia, 1918-1953
[Gordana Stojakovi¿]
8. Bulgarian Women in Legal Education and the Legal Profession During the
First Half of the Twentieth Century
[Krassimira Daskalova]
9. "The Napoleonic Civil Code is to Blame for My Decision to Study Law":
Female Polish Law Students and Lawyers in the Second Polish Republic
(1918-1939)
[Iwona Dadej]
10. Women, Equal Rights and the Legal Profession in Germany, 1895-1933
[Marion Röwekamp]
11. Feminism and Criminology in Britain, 1910-1950
[Anne Logan]
12. Attempting to Advocate: Women Entering the Legal Profession in Finland,
1885-1915
[Mia Korpiola]
Part III: Transnational and International Intersections
13. Tracking Feminist Interventions in International Law Issues at the
League of Nations: From the Nationality of Married Women to Legal Equality
in the Family, 1919-1970
[Catherine Jacques]
14. "Who Belongs" or the Question of Women's Citizenship in Switzerland
Since 1798
[Regina Wecker]
15. Legal Position of Women in Portugal: The Case of the Standing Committee
on Legislation of the National Council of Portuguese Women (CNMP),
1914-1947
[Anne Cova]
16. Night Work for White Women and Bonded Labour for "Native" Women?:
Contentious Traditions and the Globalization of Gender-Specific Labour
Protection and Legal Equality Politics, 1926 to 1939
[Susan Zimmermann]
[Ute Gerhard and Karen Offen]
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Legal Cultures and Communities of Female Protest in Modern
European History, 1860-1960s
[Sara L. Kimble and Marion Röwekamp]
Part I: Gender and Family Law
1. Adaptation, Emulation, or Tradition?: Greek Family Law and the Courts in
the First Decades of the Modern Greek State
[Evdoxios Doxiadis]
2. Family Law, Legal Reforms, Female Lawyers and Feminist Claims in Spain,
1868-1950
[Gloria Nielfa]
3. Democracy at Home: Debating Family and Marriage Law in the First
Czechoslovak Republic, 1918-1938
[Melissa Feinberg]
4. Equality at Stake: Legal and National Discourses on Family Law in
Czechoslovakia, 1918-1931
[Jana Osterkamp]
Part II: Women in the Legal Professions
5. The Rise of "Modern Portias": Feminist Legal Activism in Republican
France, 1890s-1940s
[Sara L. Kimble]
6. Women and the Courts in Twentieth-Century Belgium: An Historical
Perspective
[Eva Schandevyl]
7. The First Lawyers and Attorneys: The Struggle for Professional
Recognition of Women's Rights in Yugoslavia, 1918-1953
[Gordana Stojakovi¿]
8. Bulgarian Women in Legal Education and the Legal Profession During the
First Half of the Twentieth Century
[Krassimira Daskalova]
9. "The Napoleonic Civil Code is to Blame for My Decision to Study Law":
Female Polish Law Students and Lawyers in the Second Polish Republic
(1918-1939)
[Iwona Dadej]
10. Women, Equal Rights and the Legal Profession in Germany, 1895-1933
[Marion Röwekamp]
11. Feminism and Criminology in Britain, 1910-1950
[Anne Logan]
12. Attempting to Advocate: Women Entering the Legal Profession in Finland,
1885-1915
[Mia Korpiola]
Part III: Transnational and International Intersections
13. Tracking Feminist Interventions in International Law Issues at the
League of Nations: From the Nationality of Married Women to Legal Equality
in the Family, 1919-1970
[Catherine Jacques]
14. "Who Belongs" or the Question of Women's Citizenship in Switzerland
Since 1798
[Regina Wecker]
15. Legal Position of Women in Portugal: The Case of the Standing Committee
on Legislation of the National Council of Portuguese Women (CNMP),
1914-1947
[Anne Cova]
16. Night Work for White Women and Bonded Labour for "Native" Women?:
Contentious Traditions and the Globalization of Gender-Specific Labour
Protection and Legal Equality Politics, 1926 to 1939
[Susan Zimmermann]