ABSTRACT

The first book to examine the critical area of land law from a feminist perspective, it provides an original and critical analysis of the gendered intersection between law and land; ranging land use and ownership in England and Wales to Botswana, Papua New Guinea and the Muslim world.

The authors draw upon the diverse disciplinary fields of law, anthropology and geography to open up perspectives that go beyond the usually narrow topography and cartography of land law. Addressing an unorthodox variety of sites where questions of women's access and rights to land are raised, this book includes chapters on:

  • shopping malls
  • ancient monuments
  • nature reserves
  • housing estates
  • the family home.

An interdisciplinary and enlivening account of feminist perspectives on land law, it is an excellent addition to the bookshelves of students and researchers in legal studies, gender studies, social anthropology and social geography.

chapter Chapter 1|30 pages

Feminist perambulations

Taking the law for a walk in land 1

chapter Chapter 2|12 pages

National nature reserves

Nature as other confined

chapter Chapter 3|21 pages

Ancient monuments of national importance

Symbols of whose past?

chapter Chapter 4|32 pages

A trip to the mall

Revisiting the public/private divide 1

chapter Chapter 5|24 pages

Scapegoating and the legal landscape

Homeless women and the law

chapter Chapter 6|14 pages

Women's work

Locating gender in the discourse of anti-social behaviour

chapter Chapter 8|16 pages

‘Land doesn't come from your mother, she didn't make it with her hands'

Challenging matriliny in Papua New Guinea

chapter Chapter 9|23 pages

Unfair shares for women

The rhetoric of equality and the reality of inequality

chapter Chapter 10|21 pages

The shared home

The shared homeA rational solution through statutory reform?

chapter Chapter 11|22 pages

Networking resources

A gendered perspective on Kwena women's property rights

chapter Chapter 12|25 pages

Accidental Islamic feminism

Dialogical approaches to Muslim women's inheritance rights