Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 57
pro vyhledávání: '"Gisela Shaw"'
Autor:
Ulrike Schultz, Gisela Shaw
Does gender make a difference to the way the judiciary works and should work? Or is gender-blindness a built-in prerequisite of judicial objectivity? If gender does make a difference, how might this be defined? These are the key questions posed in th
In the past fifteen years there has been a marked increase in the international scholarship relating to women in law. The lives and careers of women in legal practice and the judiciary have been extensively documented and critiqued, but the central c
Autor:
Gisela Shaw
Publikováno v:
djbZ. 15:3-9
Publikováno v:
International Journal of the Legal Profession. 21:255-257
Judicial education has greatly expanded in common law countries in the past 25 years. More recently it has become a core component in judicial reform programmes in developing countries with gender ...
Autor:
Gisela Shaw
Publikováno v:
Communist and Post-Communist Studies. 42:395-422
Using Poland as a case study, the Polish sociologist Piotr Sztompka has demonstrated most persuasively the significance of trust (and distrust) as a key to the analysis and understanding of socio-political and socio-cultural developments in Central E
Publikováno v:
Women's History Review. 17:477-488
Autor:
Ulrike Schultz, Gisela Shaw
Publikováno v:
International Journal of the Legal Profession. 15:1-5
Does gender matter in judging? And if so, in what way? Who are the women judges? How did they get into office? How do they organise and live their lives? What are their professional careers? What c...
Autor:
Gisela Shaw
Publikováno v:
International Journal of the Legal Profession. 13:243-271
Professions in the Western world generally have traditionally thrived on the privilege of some degree of freedom from competition and regulatory autonomy within certain defined parts of the profess...
Autor:
Gisela Shaw
Publikováno v:
German Life and Letters. 58:211-225
Autor:
Ulrike Schultz, Gisela Shaw
Does gender matter in judging? And if so, in what way? Why were there so few women judges only two or three decades ago, and why are there so many now in most countries of the Western world? How do women judges experience their work in a previously m