01611pab a2200217 454500008004000000100001900040245006900059260000900128300001500137362000800152520097300160650001401133650002601147650002701173650001301200700001801213773002701231909001101258999001901269952010501288180718b2017 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aBoyd, Susan B. aLooking back, looking forward: feminist legal scholarship in SLS c2017 ap.735-756. aDec aThis article offers a review of shifts in feminist legal theory since the early 1990s. We first use our respective histories and fields of expertise to provide a brief overview and highlight some key themes within feminist legal theory. We then examine Social & Legal Studies (SLS), asking whether it has met its key goal of integrating feminist analyses at every level. Our review suggests that SLS has offered many important contributions to feminist legal scholarship but has not fulfilled its lofty goal of integrating feminist analyses at every level of scholarship. It features feminist work quite consistently and some degree of mainstreaming is evident, as is the international reach of SLS. Too many articles fail, however, to incorporate or even mention feminist approaches. We end with thoughts about, and hopes for, the future of legal feminism, examining efforts to revitalize the field and suggesting possible directions for the future. - Reproduced.  aThe state aFeminist legal theory aFeminist legal studies aFeminism aParkes, Debra aSocial & Legal Studies a116546 c116540d116540 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 26, Issue no: 6pAR117006r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR