Gender Sensitivity and the Inheritance Act of The Bahamas, 1833

The motivation for this paper stemmed from the realization that discrimination against women in the Bahamas still exists, is being continually perpetuated and, in fact, is institutionalized by the law which should enforce justice for all. Against the backdrop of preparation for the 1995 United Natio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sabrina A. Russell-Skinner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Bahamas 2008-02-01
Series:International Journal of Bahamian Studies
Online Access:https://journals.sfu.ca/cob/index.php/files/article/view/20
id doaj-0ca2c1e41b9042e9842b8c1867315663
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0ca2c1e41b9042e9842b8c18673156632021-05-27T20:11:11ZengUniversity of the BahamasInternational Journal of Bahamian Studies2220-57722008-02-0170738110.15362/ijbs.v7i0.2017Gender Sensitivity and the Inheritance Act of The Bahamas, 1833Sabrina A. Russell-Skinner0Government High SchoolThe motivation for this paper stemmed from the realization that discrimination against women in the Bahamas still exists, is being continually perpetuated and, in fact, is institutionalized by the law which should enforce justice for all. Against the backdrop of preparation for the 1995 United Nations Conference on Women, a closer look is taken at gender discrimination in the Bahamas by examining the Constitution and the Inheritance Act of 1833. The assumption that institutionalized patriarchy gives rise to gender discrimination guides the analysis. The organs of male domination and the reasons for its perpetuation are discussed as well as obstacles to the passage of the draft Inheritance Bill (1983). It is recommended the inequities arising from an inbuilt structure of a male dominated society be addressed by legislation that will ensure equity and social justice for all. Finally, it is suggested that the draft Inheritance Bill (1983) with modifications to some provisions has the potential to accomplish this.https://journals.sfu.ca/cob/index.php/files/article/view/20
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sabrina A. Russell-Skinner
spellingShingle Sabrina A. Russell-Skinner
Gender Sensitivity and the Inheritance Act of The Bahamas, 1833
International Journal of Bahamian Studies
author_facet Sabrina A. Russell-Skinner
author_sort Sabrina A. Russell-Skinner
title Gender Sensitivity and the Inheritance Act of The Bahamas, 1833
title_short Gender Sensitivity and the Inheritance Act of The Bahamas, 1833
title_full Gender Sensitivity and the Inheritance Act of The Bahamas, 1833
title_fullStr Gender Sensitivity and the Inheritance Act of The Bahamas, 1833
title_full_unstemmed Gender Sensitivity and the Inheritance Act of The Bahamas, 1833
title_sort gender sensitivity and the inheritance act of the bahamas, 1833
publisher University of the Bahamas
series International Journal of Bahamian Studies
issn 2220-5772
publishDate 2008-02-01
description The motivation for this paper stemmed from the realization that discrimination against women in the Bahamas still exists, is being continually perpetuated and, in fact, is institutionalized by the law which should enforce justice for all. Against the backdrop of preparation for the 1995 United Nations Conference on Women, a closer look is taken at gender discrimination in the Bahamas by examining the Constitution and the Inheritance Act of 1833. The assumption that institutionalized patriarchy gives rise to gender discrimination guides the analysis. The organs of male domination and the reasons for its perpetuation are discussed as well as obstacles to the passage of the draft Inheritance Bill (1983). It is recommended the inequities arising from an inbuilt structure of a male dominated society be addressed by legislation that will ensure equity and social justice for all. Finally, it is suggested that the draft Inheritance Bill (1983) with modifications to some provisions has the potential to accomplish this.
url https://journals.sfu.ca/cob/index.php/files/article/view/20
work_keys_str_mv AT sabrinaarussellskinner gendersensitivityandtheinheritanceactofthebahamas1833
_version_ 1721425282333671424