Table of contents for Law as a gendering practice / edited by Dorothy E. Chunn and Dany Lacombe.


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Part I: Theorizing Law as a Gendering Practice


1. Law as a Gendering Practice: An Overview, Dorothy E. Chunn and Dany Lacombe


2. L'intersectionalite: Feminisms in a Divided World (Quebec-Canada), Marie Claire Belleau, Universite Laval


Part II: Constructing the (Hetero)Sexual Subject of Legal Discourse


3. Justice and Law: Passion, Power, Prejudice, and So-Called Paedophilia, Shannon Bell, York University and Joseph Couture


4. Rape Uncodified: Reconsidering Bill C-49 Amendments to Candian Sexual Assault Laws, Kevin Bonnycastle, Simon Fraser University


5. Victim, Nuisance, Fallen Women, Outlaw Worker?: Making the Identity, Prostitute, in Canadian Criminal Law, Deborah Brock, Brock University


6. Mothers, Other Mothers, and Others: The Challenges and Contradictions to Lesbian Parents, Shelley A.M. Gavigan, Osgoode Hall Law School


Part III: Constructing the Racialized Other of Legal Discourse


7. Theory and Practice: Clinical Law and Aboriginal People, Dara Culhane, Simon Fraser University and Renee Taylor, University of British Columbia


8. On Law and Hegemonic Moments: Looking Beyond the Law Towards Subjectivities of Subaltern Women, Parin Dossa, Simon Fraser University


Part IV: Constructing the Public/Private Distinction of Legal Discourse


9. Custody, Access, and Relocation in a Mobile Society: (En)Gendering the Best Interests Principle, Susan B. Boyd, University of British Columbia


10. Limited by Law?: Gender, Corporate Law, and the Family Firm, Mary Condon, Osgoode Hall Law School


11. If Choice is the Answer, What is the Question?: Spelunking in Symes v. Canada, Rebecca Johnson, University of New Brunswick





Library of Congress subject headings for this publication:
Feminist jurisprudence -- Canada.