Marriage law is often conceptualised as an instrument of power that illegitimately imposes the will of the State on its citizens. Paradoxically, marriage law is also offered as a route to liberation. In this thesis, I question the efficacy of this type of analysis by investigating the actual power effects of marriage law. Using Michel Foucault’s concepts of bio-power and government, and his genealogical approach to history, I identify the role played by marriage law in governing the social domain over a discrete period of Irish history. Drawing on this analysis, I suggest that marriage law is part of a dense network of power relationships that cannot be reduced to a binary relationship of oppression and liberation. Rather, marriage law acts...
This post includes the table of contents, introduction and our comment as the editors of an interdis...
h s by 6 1 per cent of the eligible population), much more was at stake than the right to end marria...
This thesis concerns the institution of marriage, as defined by law. It considers the rule known as ...
Marriage law is often conceptualised as an instrument of power that illegitimately imposes the will ...
The past century has seen striking changes in family formation in Ireland. Family dynamics are funda...
Marriage continues to hold an important position in Irish society. While cohabitation has grown sign...
Historically, English and Irish Law were both distinctly protective of marriage (still understood as...
The purpose of this study is to investigate how premarital co-habitation is transforming the institu...
The purpose of this study is to investigate how premarital co-habitation is transforming the institu...
Marriage is an undeniably important institution of modern civilization. Indeed, among the fundamenta...
Legal arguments that a clergyman was unnecessary to form a legal marriage were increasingly raised i...
peer-reviewedDespite the enormous social changes which have taken place in Ireland in recent decades...
The last decade has seen significant change in LGBT-Q politics in many (neo)liberal democracies. In ...
On 22 May 2015, the Irish people voted in favour of marriage equality, changing the constitutional d...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Women's History ...
This post includes the table of contents, introduction and our comment as the editors of an interdis...
h s by 6 1 per cent of the eligible population), much more was at stake than the right to end marria...
This thesis concerns the institution of marriage, as defined by law. It considers the rule known as ...
Marriage law is often conceptualised as an instrument of power that illegitimately imposes the will ...
The past century has seen striking changes in family formation in Ireland. Family dynamics are funda...
Marriage continues to hold an important position in Irish society. While cohabitation has grown sign...
Historically, English and Irish Law were both distinctly protective of marriage (still understood as...
The purpose of this study is to investigate how premarital co-habitation is transforming the institu...
The purpose of this study is to investigate how premarital co-habitation is transforming the institu...
Marriage is an undeniably important institution of modern civilization. Indeed, among the fundamenta...
Legal arguments that a clergyman was unnecessary to form a legal marriage were increasingly raised i...
peer-reviewedDespite the enormous social changes which have taken place in Ireland in recent decades...
The last decade has seen significant change in LGBT-Q politics in many (neo)liberal democracies. In ...
On 22 May 2015, the Irish people voted in favour of marriage equality, changing the constitutional d...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Women's History ...
This post includes the table of contents, introduction and our comment as the editors of an interdis...
h s by 6 1 per cent of the eligible population), much more was at stake than the right to end marria...
This thesis concerns the institution of marriage, as defined by law. It considers the rule known as ...