This omnibus brings together three significant works on Gender equality which comprehensively analyse key issues including women's rights, social justice, and empowerment. Together, the Books span Legal change in India over two centuries when women's rights were negotiated, rewritten and coded. In doing so they provide a comprehensive and significant understanding of why progressive laws, once passed, continue to be implemented in such a limited manner. Theyhighlight the fact that legislations in the past fifty years have not brought gender equality in any real sense.
This omnibus brings together three significant works on Gender equality which comprehensively analyse key issues including women's rights, social justice, and empowerment. Together, the Books span Legal change in India over two centuries when women's rights were negotiated, rewritten and coded. In doing so they provide a comprehensive and significant understanding of why progressive laws, once passed, continue to be implemented in such a limited manner. Theyhighlight the fact that legislations in the past fifty years have not brought gender equality in any real sense.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Flavia Agnes is a womenâs rights lawyer. Sudhir Chandra is an independent historian. Monmayee Basu is Associate Professor, Department of History, University of Delhi.
Inhaltsangabe
* Introduction by Flavia Agnes * Law and Gender Inequality * The Politics of Womenâs Rights in India * Abbreviations * Table of Cases * 1. IntroductionâA Need for Rescrutiny * Part One: PRE-COLONIAL LEGAL STRUCTURES * 2. Plurality of Hindu Law and Womenâs Rights Under It * 3. Evolution of Islamic Law and Womenâs Spaces within It * 4. Colonial Rule and Subversion of Rights * 5. Politicization of Womenâs Rights * Part Two: POST-INDEPENDENCE DEVELOPMENTS * 6. Hindu Law ReformsâStilted Efforts at Gender Justice * 7. Erosion of Secular Principles * 8. Communal Undertones Within Recent Judicial Decisions * Part Three: DEVELOPMENTS IN THE PERSONAL LAWS OF NON-MUSLIM MINORITIES * 9. Legal Significance of the Parsi Community * 10. Political Reformulation of Christian Personal Law * Part Four: CURRENT DEBATES * 11. Model Drafts and Legal Doctrines * 12. Strategies of Reform * 13. Conclusion * Appendix I * Appendix II * Appendix III * Bibliography * Tables * Index * Enslaved Daughters * Colonialism, Law and Womenâs Rights * Prologue * 1. Rukhmabai and Her Case * 2. A Disputed Charter * 3. The Law on Trial * 4. A Challenge to Civilized Society * 5. The Brutal Embrace: Let it Stand * Epilogue * AppendicesâA to E * Index * Hindu Women and Marriage Law * From Sacrament to Contract * Preface * 1. Condition of Hindu Women during the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century * 2. The Changing Concept of Hindu Marriage * 3. The Age of Marriage * 4. Shackles for the Widow * 5. Dowry * 6. Severing the Sacred Tie * 7. The Right to Property * Epilogue * Glossary * Appendices * Bibliography * Index
* Introduction by Flavia Agnes * Law and Gender Inequality * The Politics of Womenâs Rights in India * Abbreviations * Table of Cases * 1. IntroductionâA Need for Rescrutiny * Part One: PRE-COLONIAL LEGAL STRUCTURES * 2. Plurality of Hindu Law and Womenâs Rights Under It * 3. Evolution of Islamic Law and Womenâs Spaces within It * 4. Colonial Rule and Subversion of Rights * 5. Politicization of Womenâs Rights * Part Two: POST-INDEPENDENCE DEVELOPMENTS * 6. Hindu Law ReformsâStilted Efforts at Gender Justice * 7. Erosion of Secular Principles * 8. Communal Undertones Within Recent Judicial Decisions * Part Three: DEVELOPMENTS IN THE PERSONAL LAWS OF NON-MUSLIM MINORITIES * 9. Legal Significance of the Parsi Community * 10. Political Reformulation of Christian Personal Law * Part Four: CURRENT DEBATES * 11. Model Drafts and Legal Doctrines * 12. Strategies of Reform * 13. Conclusion * Appendix I * Appendix II * Appendix III * Bibliography * Tables * Index * Enslaved Daughters * Colonialism, Law and Womenâs Rights * Prologue * 1. Rukhmabai and Her Case * 2. A Disputed Charter * 3. The Law on Trial * 4. A Challenge to Civilized Society * 5. The Brutal Embrace: Let it Stand * Epilogue * AppendicesâA to E * Index * Hindu Women and Marriage Law * From Sacrament to Contract * Preface * 1. Condition of Hindu Women during the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century * 2. The Changing Concept of Hindu Marriage * 3. The Age of Marriage * 4. Shackles for the Widow * 5. Dowry * 6. Severing the Sacred Tie * 7. The Right to Property * Epilogue * Glossary * Appendices * Bibliography * Index
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