This paper seeks to revive feminist interest in jurisprudence. However, it does not do so by conducting a historical inquiry designed to restore forgotten female jurists or reveal women’s contributions to the jurisprudential tradition. Instead, it comprises an invitation to rethink the encounter of jurisprudence with feminism. To this end it considers what counts as feminist jurisprudence, situating the rise of legal scholarship that defines itself as such, and setting out the notion of positionality as the criterion to judge what else can be included under this label. Thereafter it discusses the distinctive strands of what I deem to be feminist jurisprudence, before concluding with a call for a feminist re-imagining of jurisprudence as an ...
In the 1970s feminist legal theory furthered feminist legal practice. Feminist lawyers saw themselve...
This book chapter describes the contributions to legal intellectual history of the first four genera...
It is my view, and here, no doubt, I am pre-empting my conclusion, that what literary and feminist h...
This paper seeks to revive feminist interest in jurisprudence. However, it does not do so by conduct...
Feminist Jurisprudence is emerging theory to see the society and law from feminist point of view. La...
Book review of Feminist Jurisprudence by Patricia Smith, ed. and published by Oxford University Pres...
Professor Linda Berger rejoins her Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Opinions of the United States Supre...
Feminist legal scholars argue that the rigid, formalist approach towards judicial decision-making is...
Anything may happen when womanhood has ceased to be a protected profession, I thought, opening the d...
The word “feminism” means different things to its many supporters (and undoubtedly, to its detractor...
There has been a recent explosion in feminist jurisprudence and in legal scholarship inspired by fem...
This article uses Nicola Lacey’s 1998 book Unspeakable Subjects as a prompt to consider the potentia...
The works presented for the PhD by publication are all connected by a commitment to using law and hu...
This paper examines Dworkin\u27s interpretive theory of law from a feminist perspective, and asks wh...
While feminist legal scholarship has thrived within universities and in some sectors of legal practi...
In the 1970s feminist legal theory furthered feminist legal practice. Feminist lawyers saw themselve...
This book chapter describes the contributions to legal intellectual history of the first four genera...
It is my view, and here, no doubt, I am pre-empting my conclusion, that what literary and feminist h...
This paper seeks to revive feminist interest in jurisprudence. However, it does not do so by conduct...
Feminist Jurisprudence is emerging theory to see the society and law from feminist point of view. La...
Book review of Feminist Jurisprudence by Patricia Smith, ed. and published by Oxford University Pres...
Professor Linda Berger rejoins her Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Opinions of the United States Supre...
Feminist legal scholars argue that the rigid, formalist approach towards judicial decision-making is...
Anything may happen when womanhood has ceased to be a protected profession, I thought, opening the d...
The word “feminism” means different things to its many supporters (and undoubtedly, to its detractor...
There has been a recent explosion in feminist jurisprudence and in legal scholarship inspired by fem...
This article uses Nicola Lacey’s 1998 book Unspeakable Subjects as a prompt to consider the potentia...
The works presented for the PhD by publication are all connected by a commitment to using law and hu...
This paper examines Dworkin\u27s interpretive theory of law from a feminist perspective, and asks wh...
While feminist legal scholarship has thrived within universities and in some sectors of legal practi...
In the 1970s feminist legal theory furthered feminist legal practice. Feminist lawyers saw themselve...
This book chapter describes the contributions to legal intellectual history of the first four genera...
It is my view, and here, no doubt, I am pre-empting my conclusion, that what literary and feminist h...