New Perspectives on European Women's Legal History (eBook, PDF)
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New Perspectives on European Women's Legal History (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Kimble, Sara L.; Röwekamp, Marion
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This volume brings historical analysis to bear on the issue of gender and the law, covering themes ranging from gender in the legal profession, family law, and the intersections of law, politics, and public policy, to provide 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.
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This volume brings historical analysis to bear on the issue of gender and the law, covering themes ranging from gender in the legal profession, family law, and the intersections of law, politics, and public policy, to provide 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.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 470
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juli 2016
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317577164
- Artikelnr.: 45434693
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 470
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juli 2016
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781317577164
- Artikelnr.: 45434693
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
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]