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Titre : | From protective to equal treatment: legal framing processes and transformation of the women's movement in the 1960s (2006) |
Auteurs : | Nicholas Pedriana |
Type de document : | Article : texte imprimé |
Dans : | American Journal of Sociology (vol. 111 - n° 6, May 2006) |
Article en page(s) : | pp. 1718-1761 |
Langues: | Anglais |
Catégories : |
Thésaurus CEREQ DROIT ; EMPLOI DES FEMMES ; FEMME ; LEGISLATION ; POLITIQUE DE L'EMPLOI ; SOCIOLOGIE ; THEORIE ; ETUDE CRITIQUE ; ETUDE HISTORIQUE ; ETATS UNIS |
RĂ©sumĂ© : | The author develops the concept of legal framing to expand theoretical knowledge on the cultural and symbolic processes that enable, constrain, and transform social movements. Merging insights from social movement theory, the sociology of law, and law and society scholarship, the author argues that law is a type of âmaster frame,â and that mobilizing lawâs âconstitutiveâ symbols and categories is a central, yet routinely overlooked, way in which challengers frame their grievances, identity, and objectives. This study systematically explores legal framing processes through historicalânarrative analysis of the womenâs movement and the debate over protective labor laws in the 1960s. Historical evidence suggests that reciprocal transformations in the womenâs movement and equal employment law were largely attributable to a symbolic framing contest between competing cultural representations of gender (âprotectiveâ vs. âequalâ treatment) and that this contest was waged in explicitly legal terms. |
Document Céreq : | Non |
En ligne : | https://doi.org/10.1086/499911 |