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Challenging the public/private divide : feminism, law, and public policy / edited by Susan B. Boyd.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Toronto, Ont. : University of Toronto Press, ©1997.Description: 1 online resource (xiii, 392 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781442672819
  • 1442672811
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Challenging the public/private divide.DDC classification:
  • 305.4/0971
LOC classification:
  • HQ1236.5.C2 C42 1997eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Restructuring public and private : women's paid and unpaid work / Pat Armstrong -- Little sex can be a dangerous thing : regulating sexuality, venereal disease, and reproduction in British Columbia, 1919-1945 / Dorothy E. Chunn -- Sounds of silence : the public/private dichotomy, violence, and aboriginal women / Jennifer Koshan -- Who pays for caring for children? : public policy and the devaluation of women's work / Katherine Teghtsoonian -- Across the home/work divide : homework in garment manufacture and the failure of employment regulation / Amanda Araba Ocran -- Some mothers are better than others : a re-examination of maternity benefits / Nitya Iyer -- Balancing acts : career and family among lawyers / Fiona M. Kay -- "Jury dressed in medical white and judicial black" : mothers with mental health histories in child welfare and custody / Judith Mosoff -- Looking beyond Tyabji : employed mothers, lifestyles, and child custody law / Susan B. Boyd -- Lesbians, child custody, and the long lingering gaze of the law / Jenni Millbank -- Public taxes, privatizing effects, and gender inequality / Claire F.L. Young -- Blue meanies in Alberta : Tory tactics and the privatization of chlid welfare / Marlee Kline -- Going global : feminist theory, international law, and the public/private divide / Doris Elisabeth Buss.
Summary: Western thought has long been characterized by an ideological divide between public and private spheres. In the industrial era, the divide became highly gendered as men dominated the public spheres of politics and work, while women were closely associated with family and home. In the late twentieth century, social and legal policies have promoted equal opportunities in the labour force and shared responsibilities in the family. Despite this progress, inequalities are still evident for women in the labour force and in the family, and for some groups of women in relation to others.In this collection of original essays, feminist scholars in disciplines ranging from law to geography challenge the traditional notion of a public/private divide. The divide can represent boundaries between state and family, state and market, market and family, or state and community, which shift depending on location, social group, and historical time period. The contributors to this book examine the impact of the divide in respect to four themes: state intervention; the relationship between family, home, and work; the legal regulation of motherhood; and the challenges of privatization, restructuring, and globalization. They show that the impact of the divide varies according to factors such as race, class, (dis)ability, and sexual identity as they intersect with gender.Challenging the Public/Private Divide provides a wealth of information and analysis on current issues in Canada society, from child care to violence against women. Its impact will be felt in diverse disciplines, such as: law, public administration, political science, sociology, women's studies, and criminology.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Restructuring public and private : women's paid and unpaid work / Pat Armstrong -- Little sex can be a dangerous thing : regulating sexuality, venereal disease, and reproduction in British Columbia, 1919-1945 / Dorothy E. Chunn -- Sounds of silence : the public/private dichotomy, violence, and aboriginal women / Jennifer Koshan -- Who pays for caring for children? : public policy and the devaluation of women's work / Katherine Teghtsoonian -- Across the home/work divide : homework in garment manufacture and the failure of employment regulation / Amanda Araba Ocran -- Some mothers are better than others : a re-examination of maternity benefits / Nitya Iyer -- Balancing acts : career and family among lawyers / Fiona M. Kay -- "Jury dressed in medical white and judicial black" : mothers with mental health histories in child welfare and custody / Judith Mosoff -- Looking beyond Tyabji : employed mothers, lifestyles, and child custody law / Susan B. Boyd -- Lesbians, child custody, and the long lingering gaze of the law / Jenni Millbank -- Public taxes, privatizing effects, and gender inequality / Claire F.L. Young -- Blue meanies in Alberta : Tory tactics and the privatization of chlid welfare / Marlee Kline -- Going global : feminist theory, international law, and the public/private divide / Doris Elisabeth Buss.

Print version record.

Western thought has long been characterized by an ideological divide between public and private spheres. In the industrial era, the divide became highly gendered as men dominated the public spheres of politics and work, while women were closely associated with family and home. In the late twentieth century, social and legal policies have promoted equal opportunities in the labour force and shared responsibilities in the family. Despite this progress, inequalities are still evident for women in the labour force and in the family, and for some groups of women in relation to others.In this collection of original essays, feminist scholars in disciplines ranging from law to geography challenge the traditional notion of a public/private divide. The divide can represent boundaries between state and family, state and market, market and family, or state and community, which shift depending on location, social group, and historical time period. The contributors to this book examine the impact of the divide in respect to four themes: state intervention; the relationship between family, home, and work; the legal regulation of motherhood; and the challenges of privatization, restructuring, and globalization. They show that the impact of the divide varies according to factors such as race, class, (dis)ability, and sexual identity as they intersect with gender.Challenging the Public/Private Divide provides a wealth of information and analysis on current issues in Canada society, from child care to violence against women. Its impact will be felt in diverse disciplines, such as: law, public administration, political science, sociology, women's studies, and criminology.

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