Front cover image for Bastardy, Gender Hierarchy, and the State: The Politics of Family Law Reform in Antigua and Barbuda

Peer-reviewed

Bastardy, Gender Hierarchy, and the State: The Politics of Family Law Reform in Antigua and Barbuda

Law's saliency in the development of West Indian societies began in the earliest days of settlement and has remained critical and constitutive. The author examines the transformation of Caribbean law over time as an instrument of class, kinship, and gender relations and investigates ethnographically the repeal in 1986 of illegitimacy as a legal category in Antigua and Barbuda. In contrast to the colonial era, working-class ideas about gender and family and actions by married women played a pivotal role in banishing bastardy and reconstituting the relationship between families and the state. This struggle reveals lawmaking as a deeply contextualized and gendered practice

Article, 1992