Produktbild: Gender and Judging
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Gender and Judging Onati International Series in Law and Society

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

10.07.2013

Herausgeber

Ulrike Schultz

Verlag

Bloomsbury 3PL

Seitenzahl

642

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16,1/3,9 cm

Gewicht

1118 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-84113-640-0

Beschreibung

Portrait

Ulrike Schultz is a senior academic in law at the FernUniversität in Hagen, Germany. She heads the International Working Group on the Comparative Study of Legal Professions and has been a member of the Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law Governing Board since 2006.

Gisela Shaw, Emeritus Professor of German Studies at the University of the West of England, Bristol, UK, has worked and published in philosophy, literature and legal sociology.

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

10.07.2013

Herausgeber

Ulrike Schultz

Verlag

Bloomsbury 3PL

Seitenzahl

642

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16,1/3,9 cm

Gewicht

1118 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-84113-640-0

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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Die Leseprobe wird geladen.
  • Produktbild: Gender and Judging
  • Introduction: Gender and Judging: Overview and Synthesis
    Ulrike Schultz and Gisela Shaw

    PART 1: PIONEERS AND EMINENT WOMEN JUDGES

    1.1. Becoming the First Women Judges in Ontario: Women Lawyers, Gender and the Politics of Judicial Appointment
    Mary Jane Mossman

    1.2. Profiles in Leadership: Eminent Women Judges in the United States
    Elaine Martin

    1.3. The Entry and Integration of Women into Judicial Positions in Israel
    Eyal Katvan

    1.4. First Female Judges in the Weimar Republic in Germany: Reflections on Difference
    Marion Röwekamp

    PART 2: WOMEN JUDGES' WORK AND CAREERS

    2.1. Feminisation of the French 'Magistrature': Gender and Judging in a Feminised Context
    Anne Boigeol

    2.2. 'I was noticed and I was asked .' Women's Careers in the Judiciary. Results of an empirical study for the Ministry of Justice in Northrhine-Westfalia, Germany
    Ulrike Schultz

    2.3. Women Judges and Magistrates in Kenya: Challenges, Opportunities and Contributions
    Winifred Kamau

    2.4. The Impact of Women on the Administration of Justice in Syria and the Judicial Selection Process
    Monique C Cardinal

    2.5. Skills for Judicial Work: Comparing Women Judges and Women Magistrates
    Kathy Mack and Sharyn Roach Anleu

    2.6. Professional Stress, Discrimination and Coping Strategies: Similarities and Differences between Female
    and Male Judges in Switzerland
    Revital Ludewig and Juan LaLlave

    PART 3: GENDER PERSPECTIVES IN JUDGING

    3.1. Gendered Experiences of a Judge in Germany
    Ruth Herz

    3.2. Women Judges in the Netherlands
    Bregje Dijksterhuis

    3.3. Gender and Judging in Traditional and Modern Societies: A Comparison of Two Case Studies (Ivory Coast and Italy)
    Maria Rita Bartolomei

    3.4. Gender Arguments and Gender Perspective in Legal Judgments in Argentina
    Andrea L Gastron, M Angela Amante and Rubén Rodriguez

    3.5. Do Women on South Africa's Courts Make a Difference?
    Ruth B Cowan

    PART 4: GENDERED CONSTRUCTION OF JUDGES

    4.1. 'May it Please the Court'. Forming Sexualities as Judicial Virtues in Judicial Swearing-in Ceremonies
    Leslie J Moran

    4.2. Let History Judge? Gender, Race, Class and Performative Identity: A Study of Women Judges in England and Wales
    Hilary Sommerlad

    PART 5: FEMINIST JUDGES AND FEMINIST ADJUDICATION

    5.1. Must Feminist Judges Self-identify as Feminists?
    Beverley Baines

    5.2. Justice Marcia Neave: Case Study of a Feminist Judge
    Rosemary Hunter

    5.3. What's in a Label? Argentine Judges' Reluctance to Call Themselves Feminists
    Beatriz Kohen

    5.4. A Feminist Adjudication Process: Is There Such a Thing?
    Reg Graycar

    PART 6: QUOTAS AND DIVERSITY

    6.1. Which Judicial Selection Systems Generate the most Women Judges? Lessons from the United States
    Sally J Kenney

    6.2. Gender Quotas for the Judiciary in England and Wales
    Kate Malleson

    6.3. Rethinking Judicial Diversity
    Erika Rackley

    PART 7: GENDER AND JUDICIAL EDUCATION

    7.1. Gender and Judicial Education in India
    Ann Stewart

    7.2. Gender and Judicial Education in Japan
    Kayo Minamino

    7.3. Engendering the Judiciary-Lessons from the Philippines
    Atsuko Miwa

    7.4. Gender Training for the Judiciary in Cambodia
    Keiko Sawa

    7.5. Do German Judges Need Gender Education?
    Ulrike Schultz