In this Commentary, Franke seeks to historically contextualize the Symposium contributions of Fineman and Williams. Given that both Fineman and Williams urge a larger role for the state, the market, and private employers in addressing the demands of human dependency, Franke turns to the experiences of African Americans in the immediate post-Civil War period to illuminate the precedent for externalizing the costs of dependency outside the family, as well as the complexities of so doing. The experiences of African Americans during this time instruct that public support brings with it a set of disciplinary norms that render that support a new site for both subjectivity and subjection. This historical example demonstrates how new opportunities ...
Professor Bell has placed before us a basic question that must be dealt with by all who wish to reso...
This essay examines the question of conflict between market work and family care from the angle of f...
Traditional considerations of justice for those who require caregiving have centered on what is due ...
Care must be taken when human needs are expressed in the odd dialect of legal rights. This delicate ...
The current social contract between individuals and society is flawed. The background rules in the s...
This Commentary remarks on the work of Fineman and Williams, particularly their contributions to thi...
In this Commentary, Selmi questions whether a strategy designed to enable wo- men to devote more tim...
Reshaping the Work-Family Debate: Why Men and Class Matter by Joan Williams is illuminating, intelle...
Recognizing human freedom is never as simple as acts of legal pronouncement might suggest. Liberal a...
I begin this Article with the preceding two statements concerning care for children because they foc...
Often, knowing the origin of a rule or practice is helpful in understanding its current operation an...
This essay explores the ways in which the right to contract interacted with the free labor ideology ...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to argue that the work of the American feminist political and ...
The project connects the rhetoric in Bill Clinton’s 1992 campaign to the social contract tradition i...
While many Black people regarded slavery as a form of social death, some nineteenth-century white po...
Professor Bell has placed before us a basic question that must be dealt with by all who wish to reso...
This essay examines the question of conflict between market work and family care from the angle of f...
Traditional considerations of justice for those who require caregiving have centered on what is due ...
Care must be taken when human needs are expressed in the odd dialect of legal rights. This delicate ...
The current social contract between individuals and society is flawed. The background rules in the s...
This Commentary remarks on the work of Fineman and Williams, particularly their contributions to thi...
In this Commentary, Selmi questions whether a strategy designed to enable wo- men to devote more tim...
Reshaping the Work-Family Debate: Why Men and Class Matter by Joan Williams is illuminating, intelle...
Recognizing human freedom is never as simple as acts of legal pronouncement might suggest. Liberal a...
I begin this Article with the preceding two statements concerning care for children because they foc...
Often, knowing the origin of a rule or practice is helpful in understanding its current operation an...
This essay explores the ways in which the right to contract interacted with the free labor ideology ...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to argue that the work of the American feminist political and ...
The project connects the rhetoric in Bill Clinton’s 1992 campaign to the social contract tradition i...
While many Black people regarded slavery as a form of social death, some nineteenth-century white po...
Professor Bell has placed before us a basic question that must be dealt with by all who wish to reso...
This essay examines the question of conflict between market work and family care from the angle of f...
Traditional considerations of justice for those who require caregiving have centered on what is due ...