Mother? A Portrait of Legal Motherhood in Canada

What characteristics make a legal mother? The thesis explores some of the gendered differences in establishing legal parentage. It defends that there is no adequate conception or definition of legal motherhood in Canada. Indeed, the conception of legal motherhood is elusive or reiterates the problem...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tremblay, Régine
Other Authors: Cossman, Brenda
Language:en_ca
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/25826
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-258262014-02-04T03:30:54ZMother? A Portrait of Legal Motherhood in CanadaTremblay, RéginemothermotherhoodsexualityCanadalegal motherhood0398What characteristics make a legal mother? The thesis explores some of the gendered differences in establishing legal parentage. It defends that there is no adequate conception or definition of legal motherhood in Canada. Indeed, the conception of legal motherhood is elusive or reiterates the problematic association between biological motherhood and legal motherhood. The logical leap between a biological situation and a legal status creates two main problems. First, the elusiveness of motherhood as a legal category tends to strengthen gendered assumptions in legal parentage, and it is especially burdensome on women. Second, given the fact that no guidance is provided to decision makers, the vesting of motherhood is often subjected to an evaluation of a woman’s sexuality, sexual choices, or sexual preferences. There is a need a to put forward a comprehensive analysis of legal parentage; a gender and sexuality neutral concept of stratified legal parenthood.Cossman, Brenda2010-112011-01-11T20:09:07ZNO_RESTRICTION2011-01-11T20:09:07Z2011-01-11T20:09:07ZThesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/25826en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic mother
motherhood
sexuality
Canada
legal motherhood
0398
spellingShingle mother
motherhood
sexuality
Canada
legal motherhood
0398
Tremblay, Régine
Mother? A Portrait of Legal Motherhood in Canada
description What characteristics make a legal mother? The thesis explores some of the gendered differences in establishing legal parentage. It defends that there is no adequate conception or definition of legal motherhood in Canada. Indeed, the conception of legal motherhood is elusive or reiterates the problematic association between biological motherhood and legal motherhood. The logical leap between a biological situation and a legal status creates two main problems. First, the elusiveness of motherhood as a legal category tends to strengthen gendered assumptions in legal parentage, and it is especially burdensome on women. Second, given the fact that no guidance is provided to decision makers, the vesting of motherhood is often subjected to an evaluation of a woman’s sexuality, sexual choices, or sexual preferences. There is a need a to put forward a comprehensive analysis of legal parentage; a gender and sexuality neutral concept of stratified legal parenthood.
author2 Cossman, Brenda
author_facet Cossman, Brenda
Tremblay, Régine
author Tremblay, Régine
author_sort Tremblay, Régine
title Mother? A Portrait of Legal Motherhood in Canada
title_short Mother? A Portrait of Legal Motherhood in Canada
title_full Mother? A Portrait of Legal Motherhood in Canada
title_fullStr Mother? A Portrait of Legal Motherhood in Canada
title_full_unstemmed Mother? A Portrait of Legal Motherhood in Canada
title_sort mother? a portrait of legal motherhood in canada
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/25826
work_keys_str_mv AT tremblayregine motheraportraitoflegalmotherhoodincanada
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