“If a wife has a right to the money she can save from her housekeeping allowance, she might let her husband go short of food while she builds up a banking account. She might serve him up corned beef instead of roast beef for dinner.” These are the words of Goddard LJ in Blackwell v Blackwell [1943] 2 All ER 579, where it was held that Mrs Blackwell’s savings of one hundred pounds ten shillings in the Oxford and District Co-operative Society were the property of her husband, from whom Mrs Blackwell had been separated for two years. Protection of the husband’s roast beef might have been secured, but the consequences for Mrs Blackwell were severe. Writing in 1967, Lady Summerskill described her as ‘helpless and hopeless, a victim of a legal sy...
The article reassesses feminist challenges to the Divorce Reform Act 1969, and in particular Edith S...
Following the U.K. Labour government commitment to marriage in the 1998 Green Paper 'Supporting Fami...
This reflection is based on a conversation with Professor Carole Pateman on 4th December 2017 as we ...
The many figures that populated the family in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries gradually dis...
Despite more than a century since the Married Women’s Property Acts came into force throughout the C...
Today Blackstone\u27s account of marital status law is notorious: evidence of feudal and patriarchal...
Researchers studying prostitution and/or domestic service in a wide range of times and places have l...
Whereas many women writers were reticent on the issue of property, or vehemently opposed to improvin...
The 1870 and 1882 Married Women’s Property Acts’ passage constituted a significant change in married...
As this Article shows, the conventional historical narrative of the divorce revolution is not so muc...
This reflection is based on a conversation with Professor Carole Pateman on 4th December 2017 as we ...
Today marriage-based entitlements are considered part and parcel of marriage itself. This was not al...
This Note explores wives\u27 lawsuits in response to male drunkenness between 1850 and 1910. These s...
The legal economic position of women within marriage caused the indignation of the first English fem...
In Feminism and the Power of Law Carol Smart argued that feminists should use non-legal strategies r...
The article reassesses feminist challenges to the Divorce Reform Act 1969, and in particular Edith S...
Following the U.K. Labour government commitment to marriage in the 1998 Green Paper 'Supporting Fami...
This reflection is based on a conversation with Professor Carole Pateman on 4th December 2017 as we ...
The many figures that populated the family in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries gradually dis...
Despite more than a century since the Married Women’s Property Acts came into force throughout the C...
Today Blackstone\u27s account of marital status law is notorious: evidence of feudal and patriarchal...
Researchers studying prostitution and/or domestic service in a wide range of times and places have l...
Whereas many women writers were reticent on the issue of property, or vehemently opposed to improvin...
The 1870 and 1882 Married Women’s Property Acts’ passage constituted a significant change in married...
As this Article shows, the conventional historical narrative of the divorce revolution is not so muc...
This reflection is based on a conversation with Professor Carole Pateman on 4th December 2017 as we ...
Today marriage-based entitlements are considered part and parcel of marriage itself. This was not al...
This Note explores wives\u27 lawsuits in response to male drunkenness between 1850 and 1910. These s...
The legal economic position of women within marriage caused the indignation of the first English fem...
In Feminism and the Power of Law Carol Smart argued that feminists should use non-legal strategies r...
The article reassesses feminist challenges to the Divorce Reform Act 1969, and in particular Edith S...
Following the U.K. Labour government commitment to marriage in the 1998 Green Paper 'Supporting Fami...
This reflection is based on a conversation with Professor Carole Pateman on 4th December 2017 as we ...