Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

The Gender of Constitutional Jurisprudence Beverley Baines (Queen's University, Ontario)

The Gender of Constitutional Jurisprudence By Beverley Baines (Queen's University, Ontario)

The Gender of Constitutional Jurisprudence by Beverley Baines (Queen's University, Ontario)


$41,69
Condition - New
Only 2 left

Summary

The contributors to this book draw on a wide range of legal cases to describe the constitutional rights of women in twelve countries. Its comparative perspective is unique, providing readers with the basis for extrapolating from other national experiences to pursue constitutional equality for women in their own country.

The Gender of Constitutional Jurisprudence Summary

The Gender of Constitutional Jurisprudence by Beverley Baines (Queen's University, Ontario)

To explain how constitutions shape and are shaped by women's lives, the contributors to this volume examine constitutional cases pertaining to women in twelve countries. Analyzing jurisprudence about reproductive, sexual, familial, socio-economic, and democratic rights, they focus constructively on women's claims to equality, asking who makes these claims, what constitutional rights inform them, how they have evolved, what arguments work in defending them, and how they relate to other national issues. Their findings reveal significant similarities in outcomes and in reasoning about women's constitutional rights in these twelve countries, challenging the tradition of distinguishing constitutional jurisprudence depending on whether the country has a written or unwritten constitution, subscribes to civil or common law, is a federal or unitary state, limits constitutional adjudication to the public domain, accords international norms binding or subject to incorporation force, or relies on a specialized or general court to adjudicate constitutional matters.

The Gender of Constitutional Jurisprudence Reviews

...this book is a welcome start. Separately and together, these articles add to our theoretical understanding and reaffirm a truth... Judith A. Baer, Department of Political Science, Texas A&M University, Law and Politics Book Review
a must-have addition to libraries in comparative policy and especially feminist policy. - Dorothy E. McBride, Florida Atlantic University

About Beverley Baines (Queen's University, Ontario)

Beverly Baines is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Law at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada where she originated the Law Gender Equality and Feminist Jurisprudence courses. Her research interests include issues in constitutional law, feminist legal theory, anti-discrimination law, multiculturalism, and equality rights. She has contributed chapters to Conversation Among Friends - Entre Amies: Women and Constitutional Reform, Changing Patterns: Women in Canada, and Women and the Constitution, and has written articles for major Canadian and international journals. Ruth Rubio-Marin is Associate Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Seville, Spain. She is author of Immigration as a Democratic Challenge: Citizenship and Inclusion in Germany and the United States and of articles on language rights, nationality, immigration and gender in law. She has taught at several North American academic institutions including Princeton University and Columbia Law School and is currently a member of the Hauser Global Law School Program at New York University.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: toward a feminist constitutional agenda Beverly Baines and Ruth Rubio-Marin; 2. Speaking into a silence: embedded constitutionalism, the Australian Constitution and the rights of women Isabel Karpin and Karen O'Connell; 3. Using the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms to constitute women Beverly Baines; 4. Emancipatory equality: gender under the Columbian Constitution Martha I. Morgan; 5. Gender equality and international human rights in Costa Rican constitutional jurisprudence Alda Facio, Rodrigo Jimenez and Martha Morgan; 6. Constituting women: the French ways Eric Millard; 7. Gender in the German Constitution Blanca Rodriguez Ruiz and Ute Sacksofsky; 8. India, sex equality, and constitutional law Martha C. Nussbaum; 9. Constitutional transformation, gender equality, and religious/national conflict in Israel: tentative progress through the obstacle course Ran Hirschl and Ayelet Shachar; 10. 'No nation can be free when one half of it is enslaved': constitutional equality for women in South Africa Saras Jagwanth and Christina Murray; 11. Engendering the constitution: the Spanish experience Ruth Rubio-Marin; 12. Gender equality from a constitutional perspective: the case of Turkey Hilal Elver; 13. Gender and the United States Constitution: equal protection, privacy, and Federalism Reva B. Siegel.

Additional information

NLS9780521530279
9780521530279
052153027X
The Gender of Constitutional Jurisprudence by Beverley Baines (Queen's University, Ontario)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2004-09-20
356
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

Customer Reviews - The Gender of Constitutional Jurisprudence