1st Edition

The Ties That Bind (Routledge Revivals) Law, Marriage and the Reproduction of Patriarchal Relations

By Carol Smart Copyright 1984
    290 Pages
    by Routledge

    290 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1984, this book made an important and timely contribution to the development of the idea that the law is a major source of women’s oppression. Based on research of the theory and practice of family law, it examines the way in which private law operates to sustain, reproduce and reinforce the dependence of women in the most private of spheres, namely marriage.

    The author focuses on the point of break down or divorce, where the economic vulnerability of women caused by marriage and the sexual division of labour is most clearly expressed. She points to the way in which the law, while mitigating the worst excesses of men’s power over women in marriage, has consistently failed to tackle the economic structure of marriage and women’s fundamental material vulnerability inside the family. She confronts various myths on divorce legislation in Britain and discusses alternative feminist proposals for tackling the problems caused by women’s economic dependence in marriage. Although Smart writes in 1984, many of the issues she discusses retain their significance in today’s society.

    List of tables;  List of abbreviations;  Acknowledgements;  Introduction;  Part I: Theoretical issues  1. Legal regulation or male control  Part II: Historical issues  2. Marriage, divorce and the family in the 1950s  3. Family legislation and social change in the 1960s  4. Judge-made law in the 1960s  5. Family law after the decade of reform  6. Progress and regress in the 1970s  Part III: Practical issues  7. Doing the research: practices and dilemmas  8. Solicitors and the legal management of marital breakdown  9. Magistrates and marriage  10. Law, policy and feminism;  Postscript;  Appendices;  Notes

    Biography

    Carol Smart