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Nicola Lacey - Feminist Legal Theory
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Feminist Legal Theory and the Rights of Women Nicola Lacey* London School of Economics In this paper, | shall consider the relationship between feminist analyses of law and contemporary campaigns seeking to use codes of human rights as vehicles to secure justice, autonomy or equality for women. | shail begin by sketching out the varieties of methods developed by and issues taken up within feminist legal theory. | shall then move on to consider theories of legal and political rights, and feminist critiques of the ways in which rights as often articulated — both conceptually and substantively ~ fail satisfactorily to accommodate the dynamics of gender. Finally, | shall consider models developed within both feminist and critical race theory aimed at reconstructing rights in a more satisfactory way, examining in particular how far critiques developed primarily in relation to conceptualisations and institutionalisations of rights at the national level might be brought to bear on the debate about human rights at the intemational level. 4. Fer ist Legal Theory A. The History of Feminist Thought about Law Reading many contemporary feminist texts on law, one could be forgiven for thinking that legal feminism is the creation of the late Twentieth Century. This, however, would be a mistake, for feminist thought about law stretches back for many centuries. In the modem era, it includes the arguments for women’s rights and equal legal and political status resoundingly articulated by Mary Wollstonecraft in the Eighteenth Century’ and, of course, the suffragists of the Ninejegnth and early ‘Twentieth Centuries. Though it is true that liberal and Enlightenment thinking has been associated with an intensification of feminist analysis, there is a strong case for thinking of the feminist tradition as distinctive and impertant in its own right. On the other hand, a useful way of thinking about feminist critiqye of modem law is undoubtedly its status as an immanent critique of liberalism: as part of the conscience of a liberal order which has been slow to deliver the universalism wtih it promised.” * | should like to thank Emily Jackson for discussion of and comments on the first part of this paper, Karen Knop for her astute comments on an earlier draft; and Radu Popa for his generous assistance in gathering research materials. * Mary Wollestonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792; 1988, ed. Carol Poston, New York, W.W. Norton) * Margaret Thomton, The Liberal Promise (1990)It cannot be doubted, of course, that the >second wave= women=s movement of the late 1960s and 1970s gave a fresh impetus to feminist thought, and in particular stimulated the gradual entry of feminist ideas into the academy. The most receptive disciplines, originally, were sociology and literary studies; however, the capacity of feminist analysis to cross the boundaries of established disciplines led relatively quickly to the establishment of specific programmes and even departments of women’s or gender studies — a disciplinary innovation was arguably bought at the cost of keeping feminist issues relatively marginalised in the academy. Nonetheless, the intellectual work done in this era of the women’s movement affected not only popular consciousness and culture but put on the intellectual agenda a range of issues formerly ignored: sexual violence; the gendered division of labour; questions of pay equity; and sex discrimination, to name only the most obvious. These developments were, however, rather slow to reach legal scholarship and education. On the face of it, this is ‘surprising: many of the political and analytic issues raised by the women’s movement had, after all, centrally to do with women's legal and civic status. The earliest feminist legal scholarship pointed out and deplored the absence of women and women=s issues from the agenda of legal study; questions such as domestic and sexual violence began to find their way into family and criminal law courses and texts; women’s distinctive position in the ‘economy began to be acknowledged in labour law and social welfare law courses; and sex discrimination law — already an important part of civil rights law in many countries — found a curiously tentative position in legal education, hovering somewhere between labour law and civil rights. This initial move to include in the curriculum issues where women or gender questions were particularly visible soon led on to more searching work which identified gender issues in a far wider range of legal arrangements, with property laws, medical law and pensions law becoming a focus for analysis of ‘indirect discrimination’ broadly understood as the existence of arrangements which, though facially neutral, in fact serve to exclude or disadvantage a disproportionate number of women (or indeed men).° And this in tum led to a more radical set of theoretical arguments, with the feminists of the Oslo school, led by the late Tove Stang Dahl, setting up a department of women’s law and reorganising the very conceptualisation of subjects around women-s lives - birth law, money law, housewives= law.* Central to these early feminist approaches was a rather sharp distinction between sex and gender, with sex understood as a bodily or biological category, and gender as the socially constructed meaning of sex. Though this distinction, as we shall see, soon came under intense critical scrutiny, it had an important (and controversial) effect in shifting the political and intellectual focus towards an exploration of the role of law in constituting social meanings of gender. For while ‘women and law’ work tended to leave both categories intact, and appeared to assume that a particular ‘women’s’ perspective could be identified, the ‘law and gender’ approach presented the framework of sex/gender divisions as a general category for critical legal > See for example Susan Atkins and Brenda Hoggett, Women and the Law (1984) “Women’s Law (1986)analysis, and opened up the possibility that law's contribution to the sexing or gendering of its subjects might interact with other social forces, hence constituting multiple female subject positions.® It assumed both a powerful, dynamic role for law in the constitution of gender, and, hence, a wide-ranging and potentially radical law reform agenda.° Furthermore, it opened up the possibility of incorporating sexual orientation in the critical analysis of law’s constitution of gender, and of analysing the gendering of men, hence promising finally to explode the myth of sex/gender as exclusively a ‘woman problem’. The move from ‘women and law’ to ‘law and gender’ was not, however, without its critics. A pervasive objection was that the shift threatened to make women, and issues of particular concem to women — the ‘woman-centred-ness of feminism” - disappear again just as they had seemed to be gaining a foothold. Furthermore, there was some concem about whether the analytic frame of gender analysis would submerge or displace feminism’s traditionally political and ethical concems in favour of a scientistic approach. And finally, the question had to be asked whether the shift to gender could really make the problem of sex disappear: granted that gender roles are socially constructed (which is not to say easy to change), why had they happened to be ascribed to men and to women in the way they had? ‘These concems about the move to ‘law and gender’ prompted what can be identified as a third phase in the development of feminist legal scholarship, which might be called the move to >feminist legal theory’. in this phase, the concem has been to reprioritise the political commitments of feminist scholarship, emphasising the combination of analytic and normative/ethical concems on which feminist work is founded, while holding to a close engagement with particular legal issues and institutions.° Within this framework, feminist legal theory has come of age, and has interacted fruitfully with other important theoretical and political-academic movements such as critical race theory, post-structuralism, postmodemism, postcolonialism and psychoanalysis. Perhaps the defining feature of this phase of intellectual development is its theoretical ambition to produce a feminist jurisprudence — a general feminist account of legal method and of the substantive development of modem legal orders. It is this project which has generated a critical analysis of not merely the substance but also the conceptual framework of legal rights, Contemporary feminist legal theory is constructed out of a combination of analytic and political-ethical claims. Analytically, the claim is that sex/gender is one important social structure or axis of social differentiation, and is hence likely to characterise ® See Katherine O'Donovan, Sexual Divisions in Law (1985) © See Deborah L. Rhode, Justice and Gender (1989); Regina Graycar and Jenny Morgan, The Hidden Gender of Law (1990); Katherine Bartlett and Rosanne Kennedy (eds. ) Feminist Legal Theory 1990) Joanne Conaghan, ‘Reassessing the Feminist Theoretical Project in Law (2000) 27 Journal of Law and Society p.351 ‘See for example Ngaire Naffine and Rosemary Owens (eds,) Sexing the Subiect of Law (1997), ‘Anne Bottomley (ed.) Feminist Perspectives on the Foundational Subjects of Lave (1996).
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