Description
A radical revision of existing ideas about the popularity, legal treatment and perceptions of cohabitation between 1600 and 2010.
About the Author
Rebecca Probert is Professor of Law at the University of Warwick. She has taught family law for over a decade and published widely on both contemporary family law and its history.
Reviews
'Rebecca Probert's scholarly account of the law's response to heterosexual cohabitation over the past four centuries is both a very important contribution to cohabitation scholarship and a great pleasure to read ... Probert displays great resourcefulness in her determination to clarify the difficult questions that she addresses.' John Mee, Legal Studies
'This is an admirable book: lucid, hard-nosed, but wonderfully humane and sensitive throughout to the social context of the law. In a single paragraph, it can range from churchwardens' accounts to Carry On films, or from the seventeenth-century Ranters to the lyrics of Joni Mitchell. It deserves to be widely read by students and scholars of family law and history.' Faramerz Dabhoiwala, Canadian Family Law Quarterly
'... this is a terrific book, a splendid contribution to the literature on the interaction between an important social phenomenon and law, and a powerful corrective to many legal and historical myths. It's meticulously researched, elegantly written, and a hugely entertaining read.' Rosemary Auchmuty, Journal of Legal History
'Probert marshals an impressive array of quantitative and qualitative data, ranging from analyses of parish registers and sociological surveys of relationships, through popular literature, films and TV series, to legislation and caselaw.' David Lemmings, International Journal of Law in Context
'... a truly fresh perspective on the legal regulation of cohabitation ... The Changing Legal Regulation of Cohabitation makes an important contribution to the academic discourse in this area. This scholarly contribution is insightful, detailed and rigorously argued by the author. Furthermore, the book's contribution s also timely in light of the current debate surrounding the granting of statutory rights and remedies to cohabitants upon relationship breakdown. Therefore, within a specific field of the legal regulation of cohabitation, this book will undoubtedly have both considerable impact and also a wide readership.' Andrew Hayward, Cambridge Law Journal
Book Information
ISBN 9781107020849
Author Rebecca Probert
Format Hardback
Page Count 298
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 690g
Dimensions(mm) 253mm * 180mm * 20mm