
Labour Law, Work, and Family
Critical and Comparative Perspectives
Oxford University Press
Published on 27. October 2005
Book
Hardback
384 pages
978-0-19-928703-1 (ISBN)
Description
In recent years, gender has emerged as an important focus of attention in discourse in and around labour law. Gender is gradually moving from the margin to the mainstream of labour law debate, particularly with the development of a 'family-friendly' policy agenda. This book consists of a series of essays from an international selection of leading legal scholars exploring the shifting boundary between work and family from a labour law perspective. The object is to assess the global implications for labour law and policy of women's changing role in paid and unpaid work.
The approaches adopted by the contributors' are diverse, both conceptually and geographically, encompassing analyses from Australia, North America, Canada, the UK, Europe and Japan, and including national and supra-national perspectives. Key themes informing the collection as a whole are the re-positioning of unpaid care work as integral to the performance and structure of productive activity; and consideration of the implications of recognizing the interdependence of work and family activities. In this way, the book seeks to develop a central theme from the previously published 'Labour Law in an Era of Globalization' (Conaghan, Fischl and Klare, eds. OUP), as part of an ongoing exploration into the distributive implications of economic and political globalization.
The approaches adopted by the contributors' are diverse, both conceptually and geographically, encompassing analyses from Australia, North America, Canada, the UK, Europe and Japan, and including national and supra-national perspectives. Key themes informing the collection as a whole are the re-positioning of unpaid care work as integral to the performance and structure of productive activity; and consideration of the implications of recognizing the interdependence of work and family activities. In this way, the book seeks to develop a central theme from the previously published 'Labour Law in an Era of Globalization' (Conaghan, Fischl and Klare, eds. OUP), as part of an ongoing exploration into the distributive implications of economic and political globalization.
Reviews / Votes
This important and timely collection offers a rigorous interrogation of many of the assumptions behind this new policy agenda...a challenging and thoughtful critique of the 'work/life balance' debate * Feminist Legal Studies * ..an excellent account of the ongoing debate over the role of law in structuring the labour market and policing the boundaries between work and family. It offers a significant and very welcome addition to scholarship * Feminist Legal Studies *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Scholars and students of labour law, welfare law, family law, immigration law, international economic law, and development law, and feminist scholars, students and activists interested in women's studies, social theory and social policy
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
728 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-928703-1 (9780199287031)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Joanne Conaghan studied law at Oxford. She is currently a Professor of Law at the University of Kent at Canterbury, having previously taught at the Universities of Exeter in Devon and San Diego in California. Her areas of research include labour law, tort, and feminist legal theory, and she has published widely in all three fields. She has been Managing Editor of the international journal, Feminist Legal Studies, since 1998. She is a member of the Co-ordinating Committee of the International Network on Transformative Employment and Labour Law (INTELL) and co-editor (with Michael Fischl and Karl Klare) of Labour Law in an Era of Globalization (OUP, 2002).
Editor
Professor of Law, University of Kent
Assistant Professor of Law and Women's Studies and Gender Studies, University of Toronto
Content
I SITUATING DEBATE ABOUT WORK AND FAMILY; II REIMAGINING THE WORKER; III 'FAMILY-FRIENDLY' LABOUR LAW; IV CONCLUSION: A CAUTIONARY TALE