Ulteriori informazioni
Sommario
Preface
Table of Cases
Table of Legislation
Table of Treaties and Conventions
1. Entrenching 'Human Rights'
2. 'Bringing Rights Home'
3. Discrimination and the US and Canadian Constitution Provisions
4. Reproducing Women
5. Controlling Women
6. Securing Equality for Women at Work
7. Constitutional Rights and the Threat to Workplace Equality
8. Women as subjects of Criminal Law
9. Victimising Victims
10. Rights for Women?
Index
Riassunto
Women Under the Law is of particular topical interest given the incorporation of the European Convention on Human Rights into UK law by the Human Rights Act 1998. The Act is widely seen as a progressive legal development. The author challenges the assumption that incorporation will improve the position of women and of disadvantaged groups in general, drawing attention to the unequal access to justice of the disadvantaged - a problem reinforced by the proposed changes to Legal Aid. She also highlights the predominantly individualistic nature of the rights incorporated and focuses on the increased judicial power associated with the provision of legal 'rights' which are, of their nature, abstract and ill-defined.