Abstract
AbstractThe dominant story of matrimonial property law reform in English Canada treats the farming family case of Murdoch v. Murdoch as the great catalyst for change, but there are persistent inequalities affecting farm women, even in provinces that have made progressive changes in the law of relationship breakdown. The farm is the quintessential family business and is both place of residence and source of income. Since the farm is not readily divisible, it is not surprising that all the major marital property law cases to reach the Supreme Court of Canada have involved farm property. What is surprising is that most provincial property reforms, though inspired by the Murdoch case, explicitly exclude farms from division, and those that include farms in the property to be divided still have mechanisms that tend to favour husbands. This article examines Canadian courts' gendered conceptualization of what constitutes a family business by examining the cases on farm property and the related legislative reforms. Feminists, and all women who have benefited from matrimonial property law reform, have an obligation to recognize the problems created by our persistent failure to understand the farm as simultaneously home and place of business.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Law,Sociology and Political Science
Reference58 articles.
1. Farm Women: The Hidden Subsidy in our Food;Kubik;Canadian Woman Studies,2005
2. No Place Like Home: The Search for a Legal Framework for Cohabitants and the Family Home in Canada and Britain;Queen's Law Journal,2005
Cited by
3 articles.
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