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The Cambridge Companion to Comparative Family Law Cambridge Companions to Law Series

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Choudhry Shazia, Herring Jonathan

Couverture de l’ouvrage The Cambridge Companion to Comparative Family Law
Offers a comprehensive overview of the key issues facing family law globally, and explores how different countries have tackled them.
Families and family law have encountered significant challenges in the face of rapid changes in social norms, demographics and political expectations. The Cambridge Companion to Comparative Family Law highlights the key questions and themes that have faced family lawyers across the world. Each chapter is written by internationally renowned academic experts and focuses on which of these themes are most significant to their jurisdictions. In taking this jurisdictional approach, the collection will explore how different countries have tackled these issues. As a result, the collection is aimed at students, practitioners and academics across a variety of disciplines interested in the key issues faced by family law around the world and how they have been addressed.
Introduction; 1. Contemporary issues in family law in England and Wales Rosemary Hunter; 2. Family law in the United States Theresa Glennon; 3. Human rights in the family law context Bettina Heiderhoff; 4. Australian family property law: just and equitable' outcomes? Belinda Fehlberg and Lisa Sarmas; 5. Towards the constitutionalization of family law in Latin America Nicolás Espejo and Fabiola Lathrop; 6. The nuclear norm and the free-form family – irreconcilable paths in Swedish family law? Pernilla Leviner; 7. South African family law and the chimera of diversity Anne Louw; 8. The post-divorce child support system in China: past, present and future Lei Shi; 9. The problem with personal law Farrah Ahmed; 10. The post-colonial fallacy of 'Islamic' family law Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na'im.
Shazia Choudhry is Professor of Law at Queen Mary University of London. Her research interests lie in the fields of European and UK human rights law, and in particular gender based violence. She has published a number of articles and chapters, as well as two books, European Human Rights and Family Law (2010, with J. Herring) and Rights, Gender and Family Law (2009, with J. Herring and J. Wallbank). In addition to her publications, her work has included her appointment as Specialist Adviser to the Joint Parliamentary Committee on Human Rights Inquiry into Violence against Women (2014–15) and acting as an expert for the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the European Commission and the Council of Europe.
Jonathan Herring is Vice Dean and Professor of Law at the Law Faculty, Oxford University and Fellow in Law at Exeter College, University of Oxford. He has written nearly 100 books on family law, medical law, criminal law and legal issues surrounding care and old age. His books include Medical Law and Ethics (2018); Family Law (2018); Childhood, Vulnerability and the Law (2018); Vulnerable Adults and the Law (2016), Caring and the Law (2013) Older People in Law and Society (2009); European Human Rights and Family Law (2010, with Shazia Choudhry) and Criminal Law (2018). He has also written for the general public The Woman Who Tickled Too Much (2009) and How to Argue (2012).

Date de parution :

Ouvrage de 302 p.

15.7x23.5 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 14 jours).

Prix indicatif 109,06 €

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Date de parution :

Ouvrage de 302 p.

15.2x22.8 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 14 jours).

38,06 €

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Thème de The Cambridge Companion to Comparative Family Law :