The First Women Lawyers: A Comparative Study of Gender, Law and the Legal Professions
Autor Mary Jane Mossmanen Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 mai 2006
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781841135908
ISBN-10: 1841135909
Pagini: 342
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1841135909
Pagini: 342
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 17 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hart Publishing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
This comparative study explores the lives of some of the women who first initiated challenges to male exclusivity in the legal professions in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries.
Notă biografică
Mary Jane Mossman is Professor of Law at Osgoode Hall Law School of York University, Toronto, Canada.
Cuprins
Introduction The First Women Lawyers Prologue: Contemporary Questions about Women as Lawyers Rethinking the First Women Lawyers: Themes of Gender, Professionalism and Women's Lives Toward a Comparative History: Introducing the First Women Lawyers 1 American Pioneers: The First Women Lawyers A Century of Struggle The Context for the First Women Lawyers: New Ideas about Women's Equality and Legal Professionalism Constitutionalising (In)Equality for Women Lawyers Women's Rights and Professional Identities 2 Women Lawyers in Canada: Becoming Lawyers 'On the Same Terms as Men' Women as 'Fellow Lawyers' The Context for the First Women Lawyers in Canada: Reformist Ideas about Professionalism and Women's Roles 'Persons,' Pronouns, and Policy Choices: Judicial Reasoning in French and Langstaff Contested Ideas: New Women and Legal Professionalism 3 'Sound Women' and Legal Work: The First Women in Law in Britain Women's Access to the Legal Professions in Britain Eliza Orme: Challenging 'Woman's Sphere' and a 'Gentleman's Profession' A Woman in Law in the Public Sphere Eliza Orme and the Gender Issue 4 Colonies of the British Empire: The First Woman Lawyer in New Zealand Women Lawyers in the Colonies Ethel Benjamin A 'Rebel [Extending] the Boundary of the Right'? 5 The Empire and British India: The First Indian Woman 'In Law' A Woman Pleading in a British Court in India: 1896 Becoming a Woman in Law in India Cornelia Sorabji: 'No Peer Among the Women of India' 6 European Connections: Women in Law and the Role of Louis Frank La Femme-Avocat and European Women Lawyers Lydia Poët, Marie Popelin and Jeanne Chauvin: Louis Frank's Support for Women in Law The Context of L'Affaire Chauvin Conclusion Reflecting on the First Women Lawyers
Recenzii
Mossman's The First Women Lawyers offers a pinnacle achievement, both in depth of biographical and legal case inquiry and in scope of comparative cross-national research. For scholars of the legal profession, and gender and the professions more generally, The First Women Lawyers is simply required reading.offers tremendous breadth of cross-national research and refined precision through detailed individual biographies, blended together in a masterful work. Extricating patterns across countries, time, lives, and laws is a monumental undertaking. Mossman succeeds formidably, and her meticulous comparative analyses reveal several compelling patterns.offers a wealth of new insights and resolutely challenges established views held by several scholars of women in the legal profession...does much to advance our understanding of the culture of the legal profession and women's challenges to male exclusivity during the past two hundred years...Mossman...provides the most ambitious cross-national comparative and historical work on women lawyers to date.
.a thoughtful exploration.it fits well alongside..the contemporary accounts of women lawyers at the turn of the 21st century.
It is a compelling story both scholars and the general population should be able to appreciate. In addition, the book is particularly well suited for those interested in comparative scholarship, gender issues, and of course, law and politics.It is one thing to write a scholarly work, and another to write in a manner that makes the experience both informative and enjoyable. Mossman clearly does the latter while holding true to comparative and historical institutionalist methodology.
I recommend this as a text for graduate students in women studies or legal history; as a text for further reading for undergraduate studies in colleges and universities, particularly in the areas of organizational behaviour or human resources. It is an edifying and informative read for feminists.
Some of the most interesting insights of Mossman's work involve her identification of those historical aspects of women's entry into the law that shaped and continue to impact the way the profession is conducted today.
...a rich historical treasure trove in which one can find lots of theoretical and evidential jewels.[Mossman's] assiduous approach to research, combined with her wide knowledge of previous work on women's entry into the legal profession, has enabled her to make useful cross-cultural comparisons and new theoretical points.
In its identification of important themes and issues, no less than its careful study of hitherto neglected sources, Mossman's book offers an invaluable and very readable contribution.
The First Women Lawyers is a lively account of remarkable women who became the first women to practice law in their regionsThe breadth and detail of this work develops themes of gender and professionalism on a global scale, while remaining true to the lives and spirits of these women.The issues raised . establish and important context to the issues we face today in the professions.
.a thoughtful exploration.it fits well alongside..the contemporary accounts of women lawyers at the turn of the 21st century.
It is a compelling story both scholars and the general population should be able to appreciate. In addition, the book is particularly well suited for those interested in comparative scholarship, gender issues, and of course, law and politics.It is one thing to write a scholarly work, and another to write in a manner that makes the experience both informative and enjoyable. Mossman clearly does the latter while holding true to comparative and historical institutionalist methodology.
I recommend this as a text for graduate students in women studies or legal history; as a text for further reading for undergraduate studies in colleges and universities, particularly in the areas of organizational behaviour or human resources. It is an edifying and informative read for feminists.
Some of the most interesting insights of Mossman's work involve her identification of those historical aspects of women's entry into the law that shaped and continue to impact the way the profession is conducted today.
...a rich historical treasure trove in which one can find lots of theoretical and evidential jewels.[Mossman's] assiduous approach to research, combined with her wide knowledge of previous work on women's entry into the legal profession, has enabled her to make useful cross-cultural comparisons and new theoretical points.
In its identification of important themes and issues, no less than its careful study of hitherto neglected sources, Mossman's book offers an invaluable and very readable contribution.
The First Women Lawyers is a lively account of remarkable women who became the first women to practice law in their regionsThe breadth and detail of this work develops themes of gender and professionalism on a global scale, while remaining true to the lives and spirits of these women.The issues raised . establish and important context to the issues we face today in the professions.
Descriere
Comparative study exploring the lives of the women who challenged male exclusivity in the legal professions in the late-19th and early-20 centuries.