In a paradigm-shifting book, Martha Albertson Fineman, the influential legal theorist, makes the case that the sexually-affiliated couple is not the optimal building block for contemporary families. Rather, society should be organized around "caretaking relationships," particularly those involving children or elderly dependents. Having previously argued in "The Neutered Mother" for the end of marriage, Fineman now moves beyond changes in the family itself to other adjacent social institutions, considering what types of ...
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In a paradigm-shifting book, Martha Albertson Fineman, the influential legal theorist, makes the case that the sexually-affiliated couple is not the optimal building block for contemporary families. Rather, society should be organized around "caretaking relationships," particularly those involving children or elderly dependents. Having previously argued in "The Neutered Mother" for the end of marriage, Fineman now moves beyond changes in the family itself to other adjacent social institutions, considering what types of adjustments are necessary to achieve a more just and realistic allocation of responsibility for dependency. Sure to cause an uproar in fields ranging from law to economics and social welfare, The Autonomy Myth offers an important new way to think about our society and its institutions.
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