Recent public debates about family law reform have revealed both support for and criticism of legislative policies that seek to shape social norms. Amidst this debate was a suggestion from some quarters that the Whitlam Government\u27s removal of fault-based divorce is responsible for the gendered tensions that characterise modern reform debates. This article draws on archival records and interviews conducted with family law professionals who worked in the system in the 1970s and experienced the transition to the no-fault system, to explore the principles underlying the introduction of the Family Law Act of 1975 and to identify the sources of continuing dissension about its impact
The article reassesses feminist challenges to the Divorce Reform Act 1969, and in particular Edith S...
In family law, as in other legal disciplines, the use of alternative dispute resolution has dramatic...
In the past fifty years, divorce law has turned upside down. Marriage is not assumed to be a lifelon...
Recent public debates about family law reform have revealed both support for and criticism of legisl...
There are few areas of public policy in the Western world where there is as much turbulence as in fa...
This thesis examines the adoption of no-fault divorce laws through sociology of law functionalist an...
This article discusses dilemmas for women and children arising out of the Australian Federal Governm...
In recent years, widespread disillusionment over no-fault divorce has focused debate on the equity o...
This article examines the images of feminism and women’s groups in family law reform debates, partic...
Domestic relations law has struggled with feminism for decades, and it has never truly found a place...
Did the divorce revolution betray the interests of American women? While there has been considerable...
This article offers a retrospective analysis of feminist research on tax and family law and developm...
As this Article shows, the conventional historical narrative of the divorce revolution is not so muc...
My qualifications for delivering this lecture in honour of the late Horace E. Read are questionable....
Recent empirical research conducted on the impact of the Family Law Reform Act 1995 (Cth) suggests t...
The article reassesses feminist challenges to the Divorce Reform Act 1969, and in particular Edith S...
In family law, as in other legal disciplines, the use of alternative dispute resolution has dramatic...
In the past fifty years, divorce law has turned upside down. Marriage is not assumed to be a lifelon...
Recent public debates about family law reform have revealed both support for and criticism of legisl...
There are few areas of public policy in the Western world where there is as much turbulence as in fa...
This thesis examines the adoption of no-fault divorce laws through sociology of law functionalist an...
This article discusses dilemmas for women and children arising out of the Australian Federal Governm...
In recent years, widespread disillusionment over no-fault divorce has focused debate on the equity o...
This article examines the images of feminism and women’s groups in family law reform debates, partic...
Domestic relations law has struggled with feminism for decades, and it has never truly found a place...
Did the divorce revolution betray the interests of American women? While there has been considerable...
This article offers a retrospective analysis of feminist research on tax and family law and developm...
As this Article shows, the conventional historical narrative of the divorce revolution is not so muc...
My qualifications for delivering this lecture in honour of the late Horace E. Read are questionable....
Recent empirical research conducted on the impact of the Family Law Reform Act 1995 (Cth) suggests t...
The article reassesses feminist challenges to the Divorce Reform Act 1969, and in particular Edith S...
In family law, as in other legal disciplines, the use of alternative dispute resolution has dramatic...
In the past fifty years, divorce law has turned upside down. Marriage is not assumed to be a lifelon...