Love, Labour and Law: Early and Child Marriage in India is a path-breaking book on an issue that has not been analysed in depth for a while, perhaps since it does not affect the elite. Today, the child brides are usually from poor families. They are of 15–17 years as compared to much younger brides in the earlier times. The book discusses why child marriages persist despite numerous legislative and policy initiatives to ‘eliminate’ the practice. The chapters examine social and legal reforms to raise the age of marriage; contemporary education and health-related policy attempts at prevention; relationship of child marriage with child labour, sex work, human trafficking and other issues. Increasingly, there is greater resistance to marriages arranged by parents from the ‘child’ brides themselves who can now access institutional and bureaucratic support. How hopeful are these developments? The book goes beyond a simple policy focus on ‘elimination’ and provides a much-needed understanding of marriage and women’s agency within the context of the Indian marriage system.
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This book studies socio-economic characteristics of child/early marriage, explaining its prevalence and persistence.
Preface and Acknowledgements Introduction by Samita Sen Some Historiographical Challenges in Approaching Child Marriage in India - Mary E. John Child Marriage and the Second Social Reform Movement - Bhaswati Chatterjee Governing Child Marriage in India: The Protracted Reform Process - Elvira Graner Love and Law: Understanding Child Marriages in Rural West Bengal - Ishita Savina Chowdhury and Utsarjana Mutsuddi Schooling, Work and Early Marriage: Girl Children in Contemporary Bengal - Deepita Chakravarty Wives and Workers: Early Marriage in West Bengal - Samita Sen and Anindita Ghosh Linking Child Marriage and Prostitution: The Last Girl - Tinku Khanna and Juanita Kakoty Preventing Child Marriage in West Bengal: The Experience of Barddhaman District - Biswajit Ghosh A Select Bibliography - Samita Sen and Elvira Graner Index
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9789381345580
Publisert
2021-01-15
Utgiver
Vendor
SAGE Publications India Pvt Ltd
Vekt
540 gr
Høyde
215 mm
Bredde
139 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
308

Om bidragsyterne

Samita Sen is Vere Harmsworth Professor in Imperial and Naval History at the University of Cambridge. She was the first Vice Chancellor, Diamond Harbour Women’s University, West Bengal. She has taught at the universities of Calcutta and Jadavpur. Among her publications are Women and Labour in Late Colonial India (Cambridge University Press 1999) that won the Trevor Reese Prize in Commonwealth History; with Nilanjana Sengupta, Domestic Days: Women, Work, and Politics in Contemporary Kolkata (Oxford University Press 2016) and Passage to Bondage: Labour in the Assam Tea Plantations (Stree 2016). Presently working on women’s migration and history of marriage, she has published papers on education, the women’s movement, religious conversion, informal labour and domestic violence. She has participated in action research on gender budgeting, women in governance and women’s land rights.   Anindita Ghosh received her Ph.D from Jadavpur University and worked with research projects of the School of Women’s Studies, Jadavpur University. She is a member of Sachetana, Kolkata, a voluntary women’s organization. Currently, she is a consultant for Headword, a national publishing house.