This book explores womens rights from an international perspective. The authors discuss abortion, surrogacy, prostitution, marriage and family law, touching on themes including children, property, forced and arranged marriage and under-age marriage, separation, divorce and widowhood. They also analyse commerce and financial rights, as well as employment rights and women in the corporate sector. Throughout the book these topics raise questions of respect, from the perspective of violence against women, provision of resources and services, and women in the criminal justice system under bail and imprisonment. This book also addresses the representation of women in media and politics, including in film and literature. Overall, the authors explore the intersection of rights, respect and representation, and their roles in womens status in society as well as in law.
Chapter 1: Autonomy Power and Respect in Womens Rights and
Representation.
Chapter 2: A Mother of a Job The Control and Commodification
of Womens Reproduction.
Chapter 3: The Daughters of the Carnation Revolution
50 Years of Womens Rights in Portugal.
Chapter 4: Widows Denial of Rights
and Respect in Southern Nigeria.
Chapter 5: Forging the Right to Work with
Metal Women and the Struggle for Work in Wollongong.
Chapter 6: Demanding
the Right of Representation for Women in Corporate Structures and Policy in
the United Kingdom.
Chapter 7: Criminal Court Links to a Better Life and a
Better Community in Queensland Australia.
Chapter 8: When a Womans Body is
Not her Own Regulating Women through Abortion Law.
Chapter 9: Surrogacy A
Matter of Womens Right to Self Determination or Exploitation of Womens
Bodies.
Chapter 10: The Prostitution System as the Wreckage of Womens
Autonomy Revising Sexual Assault Law to Undermine Structural.
Chapter 11:
Informed Consent and the Prevention of Loss of Innocence Child and Forced
Marriage in the United States.
Chapter 12: Between Legal and NonLegal
Terrains Religious Nationalisms and Racialized Women Immigrants in the United
States.
Chapter 13: Lobbying for Change One Womans Experiences of
Incarceration and Male Violence.
Chapter 14: Representation Making the
Absent Present.
Chapter 15: Thieving Rorters A Linguistic Analysis of
Australian Female Politicians Construction in Public Comments in the post
Gillard Period.
Chapter 16: State Violence Womens Safety and the Funding
Cliff Edge The Impact of the New Funding Policy in Meeting the Needs of Black
and Minoritised Women.
Chapter 17: Women and Property An Early Literary
Response.
Chapter 18: Lolita The Mocked Female Reader.
Chapter 19: Living
in a Pornographic World Constraint on the Autonomy of Girls and Women.-
Chapter 20: Barbie Meets A Very Poor Thing Silenced by the Lambs Feminist
Filmmaking En Counters Masculine Renditions of the Female.
Chapter 21:
Parsing Womens Rights in Law and Society.
Jocelynne A. Scutt is Adjunct Professor at the University of New South Wales (UNSW), Sydney, Australia, and formerly Senior Teaching Fellow and Visiting Professor at the University of Buckingham, UK. A practicing Barrister and human rights lawyer at Fraser Chambers, Leadenhall Street, London, UK, and the Victorian Bar, William Street, Melbourne, Australia, she is also an historian and filmmaker.