2023
DOI: 10.1007/s10691-022-09508-3
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“I Don’t Think That’s Something I’ve Ever Thought About Really Before”: A Thematic Discursive Analysis of Lay People’s Talk about Legal Gender

Abstract: This article examines three divergent constructions about the salience of legal gender in lay people’s everyday lives and readiness to decertify gender. In our interviews (and survey data), generally participants minimised the importance of legal gender. The central argument in this article is that feminist socio-legal scholars applying legal consciousness studies to legal reform topics should find scrutinizing the construction of interview talk useful. We illustrate this argument by adapting and applying Ewic… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Touch, fragility, preciousness, wildness, getting burned, and prematurity emerge as powerful tropes. Elizabeth Peel and Hannah Newman's (2023) article also takes up ideas of legal consciousness. Approaching gender (including in the discursive form of 'sex') as a normative order loosely analogous to law, they examine attachments and views on gender/sex and its reform prompted by asking interviewees about decertification.…”
Section: Decertification As a Research Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Touch, fragility, preciousness, wildness, getting burned, and prematurity emerge as powerful tropes. Elizabeth Peel and Hannah Newman's (2023) article also takes up ideas of legal consciousness. Approaching gender (including in the discursive form of 'sex') as a normative order loosely analogous to law, they examine attachments and views on gender/sex and its reform prompted by asking interviewees about decertification.…”
Section: Decertification As a Research Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While much of it has played out in social and mainstream media, feminist organisations, and institutions, such as universities, during the period of our research a series of legal cases were also brought challenging, in different ways, moves towards self-identification and the institutional diminution of sex-based approaches to the category 'woman'. 7 The qualitative data which Emerton (2023), and Peel and Newman (2023) analyse in their articles on legal and gender consciousness, respectively, need to be read within this light. People's concerns about decertification were very strongly influenced by the conflict taking place over gender classifications and self-identification.…”
Section: Decertification As a Research Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Building on the foundational work of Sarat (1990) and Silbey (1992, 1998), a substantial body of socio-legal research has explored the everyday life and power of law (on the varieties of legal consciousness research, see, e.g., Halliday 2019). Since complicated and expanded, 11 Ewick and Silbey's original classification of legal consciousness into 'before the law', 'with the law' and 'against the law' continues to have relevance for contemporary research, including research relating to sex, gender and sexual orientation (see, e.g., Cowan 2020;Harding 2010;Hull 2016;Peel and Newman 2023). Briefly, a 'before the law' orientation regards the law with respect and reverence and as rational, impartial, objective and majestic.…”
Section: Situating the Research: Legal Consciousness Idioms And Touchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…"We're not there yet" Interviewees' consensus that society wasn't ready for decertification dovetailed with the project's findings on lay people's views (Peel and Newman 2023). Two aspects of readiness were raised, first, the level of public understanding and support for such radical law reform, and second, the status of gender equality in society.…”
Section: "I'm Treating It As a Really Precious Thing … Be Very Careful"mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other articles in this special issue address different aspects of our work on decertification. The reasons for considering decertification as a legal reform have been considered at length elsewhere but include eradicating complex and humiliating legal gender reclassification processes for transgender people, unpicking the effects of binary legal categories of male/female in excluding non-binary people from key rights, recognising plural constructions and experiences of gender, and addressing law's role in substantiating conservative conceptions of sex and gender (Cruz 2004;Katyal 2017;Clarke 2018;Cannoot and Decoster 2020;Holzer 2020;Venditti 2020;Peel and Newman 2023). Concerns that have been expressed about such a reform include that it could mask inequalities instead of addressing them; it could undermine or make it harder to regulate single-sex spaces ; it might disproportionately impact people already disadvantaged on other grounds; and it could undermine accuracy and consistency in data collection (Cooper et al 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%