Postscript: Feminist Legal Theory in the 21st Century
Abstract
:- Paul Baumgardner, Princeton University, USA: “Ronald Reagan, the Modern Right, and … the Rise of the Fem-Crits” (Baumgardner 2019). This article explores the foundational role of feminist critical legal scholars, colloquially known as the “Fem-Crits”. Baumgardner questions whether the resistance of the Fem-Crits to the conservatism of the 1980s might provide lessons for progressive lawyers and feminist legal theorists in responding to the conservative agenda of the Trump administration today. He argues that the successors to the Fem-Crits are indeed able to play an essential role in strengthening progressive movements.
- Adrian Howe, Independent researcher, Melbourne, Australia: “‘Endlessly Valuable’ Discursive Work–Intimate Partner Femicide, an English Case Study” (Howe 2019). This article addresses the ongoing issue of violence against women, with particular regard to intimate partner femicide. Howe focuses on the reform of provocation defences in England and Wales. She invokes insights from Carol Smart’s 1989 text, Feminism and the Power of Law. Howe argues that Smart’s methodology enables legal texts to be read as sites in which the law’s truth about gendered relationships can be contested. She illustrates this proposition with reference to recent cases.
- Karen O’Connell, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia, “Can Law Address Intersectional Sexual Harassment? The Case of Claimants with Personality Disorders” (O’Connell 2019). This article addresses a unique dimension of intersectional discrimination in the context of sexual harassment, namely that of claimants with personality disorders, a notably stigmatised manifestation of disability discrimination. While there are few reported cases, O’Connell argues that, far from strengthening the relevant provision in the Australian federal Sex Discrimination Act, the decisions that she analyses may actually undermine the provision.
- Kcasey McLoughlin and Alex O’Brien, University of Newcastle, Australia, “Feminist Interventions in Law Reform: Criminalising Image-Based Sexual Abuse in New South Wales” (McLoughlin and O’Brien 2019). While agitation for law reform is a familiar pursuit of feminist legal scholars, image-based sexual abuse is very much a 21st century issue. The article examines the process surrounding the criminalisation of this harm in the state of New South Wales (Australia), paying particular attention to the contradictions associated with “using the master’s tools” in law reform. The authors were surprised at the positive reaction to feminist scholarship in this instance as scholars were not only listened to but were also able to set the agenda.
- Dorota Anna Gozdecka, University of Helsinki, Finland, “Backlash or Widening the Gap?: Women’s Reproductive Rights in the Twenty-First Century” (Gozdecka 2020). This article is concerned with the ongoing struggle by women for autonomy over their reproductive rights. With particular regard to Ireland and the United States, Gozdecka argues that the contemporary backlash is a product of the historical fragility around reproductive rights that is enmeshed in issues of religion and political conservatism. She emphasises the elusiveness of lasting reform and doubts the ability ever to be able to claim “victory”.
- Ana Oliveira, University of Coimbra, Portugal, “Subject (in) Trouble: Humans, Robots, and Legal Imagination” (Oliveira 2020). This article sets out to problematise the meaning of the legal subject, which may now transcend that of the human to include the posthuman, anthropomorphised manifestations of nature or robots. In considering some intriguing contemporary examples, Oliveira identifies the biopolitical and epistemological challenges that the new subject presents for law. She argues that the legal subject is “in trouble” but this is always contingent on the cartography of power and knowledge.
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Thornton, M. Postscript: Feminist Legal Theory in the 21st Century. Laws 2020, 9, 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws9030016
Thornton M. Postscript: Feminist Legal Theory in the 21st Century. Laws. 2020; 9(3):16. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws9030016
Chicago/Turabian StyleThornton, Margaret. 2020. "Postscript: Feminist Legal Theory in the 21st Century" Laws 9, no. 3: 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws9030016
APA StyleThornton, M. (2020). Postscript: Feminist Legal Theory in the 21st Century. Laws, 9(3), 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws9030016