ABSTRACT
This chapter, which will appear in the Oxford Handbook of Feminism and Law in the US (Deborah Brake, Martha Chamallas and Verna Williams, eds), examines feminist efforts to disentangle womanhood, biological motherhood, and social motherhood in order to promote equality in the law. It argues that this approach has produced important feminist influence and results in some areas of law but has led to a lack of feminist influence in areas where biological and social motherhood overlap, such as parental rights, reproductive technology, and surrogacy. Just as the law needed a theoretical boost that went beyond gender neutrality to see the gendered harm of sexual harassment at work, it needs a feminist account of pregnancy and birth that recognizes that these biological processes have social, relational dimensions.
Hendricks, Jennifer S, Disputed Conceptions of Motherhood (December 9, 2020). Forthcoming, Oxford Handbook of Feminism and Law in the US (Deborah Brake, Martha Chamallas and Verna Williams, eds).
First posted 2021-01-13 07:17:36
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