Lexington Books
Pages: 220
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅛
978-1-4985-5969-0 • Hardback • May 2019 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-5970-6 • eBook • May 2019 • $105.50 • (£82.00)
Malcolm Voyce is professor of law at Macquarie University.
Chapter 1: The Social Context of Farming
Chapter 2: The Dispossession of Aboriginals from Land: An Application of Foucault’s Theories on Race and Sexuality
Chapter 3: Property and the Governance of the Family Farm
Chapter 4: A Reading of Divorce Judgments and Reflections on “Spatiality” and “Sexuality”
Chapter 5: Governing at a Distance: The Role of Trusts in Structuring Family Life in Rural Australia
Chapter 6: Towards a ‘Family Provision Jurisprudence’: A Case Study on the Farming Inheritance Cases
Chapter 7:Towards a ‘Family Provision Jurisprudence’: A Case Study on the Farming Inheritance Cases
Chapter 8: Governing the Rural Family in Australia from a Distance: The Family Provision Act and the Role of ‘Expert Knowledges’
“Foucault and Family Relations is a highly illuminating study of the importance of the family as a device for the historical advance of liberal colonialism in Australia, as well as for the critique of liberalism globally. Voyce shows us the darkness of connections between family, sexuality and race, and reveals the family for the colonial, patriarchal and heteronormative stooge which it so often was and still is.”
— Julian Reid, University of Lapland
“Malcolm Voyce brings Foucault to life in an original and perceptive understanding of farm succession in Australia. The book will appeal to those concerned with the ways the law has shaped, and is shaping, property relations among farm families.”
— Geoffrey Lawrence, University of Queensland