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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Sally Kenney (Tulane University, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.448kg ISBN: 9780415881449ISBN 10: 0415881447 Pages: 328 Publication Date: 13 July 2012 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1. Introduction: Gender as a Social Process 2. Gender, Judging, and Difference 3. Mobilizing Emotions: The Case of Rosalie Wahl and the Minnesota Supreme Court 4. Strategic Partnerships and Women on the Federal Bench 5. Gender on the Agenda: Lessons from the United Kingdom 6. A Case for Representation: the European Court of Justice 7. Backlash Against Women Judges 8. Conclusion: Drawing on the History of Women’s Exclusion from Juries to Make the Case for Women JudgesReviewsIn this impressive work of seminal scholarship, Professor Kenney documents and articulates a persuasive case for the value a gender analysis of legal systems and decisions, as weall as there neing more politically and judicially astute women appointed to the bench. Informed, informative, and enhanced with the inclusion of extensive notes, a substantial bibliography, and a comprehensive index, Gender and Justice is very strongly recommended as a core addition to academic library Gender Studies reference collections. - Library Bookwatch, Midwest Book Review Throughout the book, Kenney critiques essentialist frameworks and what has been left out of public law scholarship with a wit that makes a reader laugh out loud, not a common reaction to reading studies of judging. - Susan M. Sterett, Department of Political Science, University of Denver, Law and Politics Book Review In this impressive work of seminal scholarship, Professor Kenney documents and articulates a persuasive case for the value a gender analysis of legal systems and decisions, as weall as there neing more politically and judicially astute women appointed to the bench. Informed, informative, and enhanced with the inclusion of extensive notes, a substantial bibliography, and a comprehensive index, Gender and Justice is very strongly recommended as a core addition to academic library Gender Studies reference collections. - Library Bookwatch, Midwest Book Review Throughout the book, Kenney critiques essentialist frameworks and what has been left out of public law scholarship with a wit that makes a reader laugh out loud, not a common reaction to reading studies of judging. - Susan M. Sterett, Department of Political Science, University of Denver, Law and Politics Book Review Kenney's book tells us several stories of powerful women in the judiciary and why their presence matters. Through a series of detailed and well-researched case studies, she provides illuminating material to support her general position of the need to understand the discriminating potential of sex as a variable supplemented by an appreciation of the power of gender as a social process... this book has a global reach in the examples used and the concepts deployed that aid the analysis of the cases chosen. Throughout Kenney is careful and judicious in her use of the terms sex and gender and thoughtful in the analyses offered. - Sandra Walklate, Liverpool University In this impressive work of seminal scholarship, Professor Kenney documents and articulates a persuasive case for the value a gender analysis of legal systems and decisions, as weall as there neing more politically and judicially astute women appointed to the bench. Informed, informative, and enhanced with the inclusion of extensive notes, a substantial bibliography, and a comprehensive index, Gender and Justice is very strongly recommended as a core addition to academic library Gender Studies reference collections. - Library Bookwatch, Midwest Book Review Throughout the book, Kenney critiques essentialist frameworks and what has been left out of public law scholarship with a wit that makes a reader laugh out loud, not a common reaction to reading studies of judging. - Susan M. Sterett, Department of Political Science, University of Denver, Law and Politics Book Review Kenney's book tells us several stories of powerful women in the judiciary and why their presence matters. Through a series of detailed and well-researched case studies, she provides illuminating material to support her general position of the need to understand the discriminating potential of sex as a variable supplemented by an appreciation of the power of gender as a social process... this book has a global reach in the examples used and the concepts deployed that aid the analysis of the cases chosen. Throughout Kenney is careful and judicious in her use of the terms sex and gender and thoughtful in the analyses offered. - Sandra Walklate, Liverpool University Author InformationSally Kenney is Professor at the Newcomb College Institute of Tulane University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |