Violence against Women and Regimes of Exception investigates how migration law disadvantages and discriminates against women. Evaluating six legal regimes, this book reveals the devastating impact of rules that increase women's vulnerability to violence, deny them protection from it, and render many victims destitute and at risk of deportation.
Violence against Women and Regimes of Exception investigates how migration law disadvantages and discriminates against women. Evaluating six legal regimes, this book reveals the devastating impact of rules that increase women's vulnerability to violence, deny them protection from it, and render many victims destitute and at risk of deportation.
Catherine Briddick is the Andrew W Mellon Associate Professor of International Human Rights and Refugee Law at the Refugee Studies Centre, University of Oxford. Her work on protection, published in leading academic journals and collections, cuts across subjects and regimes, including UK immigration and public law, non-discrimination and equality law, European Union law, and public international law. Catherine is also a barrister (currently non-practicing). Before entering academia, she managed and delivered legal advice services in the not-for-profit sector.
Inhaltsangabe
Part I. Discrimination, Violence, and Compounded Disadvantage 1: Introduction: Setting Precedent-Migrant Women and the Law 2: Probationary Wives and Precarious Workers 3: Violence against Women 4: The Wrong and Its Remedy Part II. Six Regimes of Exception 5: Domestic Violence Rules Compared 6: Regime of Exception or Regime of Readmission? 7: The Istanbul Convention, an Alternative Approach? 8: Conclusion: The Exceptions that Prove the Rule
Part I. Discrimination, Violence, and Compounded Disadvantage 1: Introduction: Setting Precedent-Migrant Women and the Law 2: Probationary Wives and Precarious Workers 3: Violence against Women 4: The Wrong and Its Remedy Part II. Six Regimes of Exception 5: Domestic Violence Rules Compared 6: Regime of Exception or Regime of Readmission? 7: The Istanbul Convention, an Alternative Approach? 8: Conclusion: The Exceptions that Prove the Rule
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