A Woman’s Work is… Unfinished Business: Justice for the Disappeared Magdalen Women of Modern Ireland. Gleeson, K. Feminist Legal Studies, 25(3):291–312, November, 2017.
A Woman’s Work is… Unfinished Business: Justice for the Disappeared Magdalen Women of Modern Ireland [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
In this article I explore one core feature of contemporary campaigns for justice for Ireland’s Magdalen women concerning their deaths and disappearances, which continue to be denied by a State that has only recently started to acknowledge civilian deaths in other contexts such as armed conflict. I examine the treatment of the disappeared and deceased Magdalen women in the economic and political context of the Irish use of religious institutions and consider the significance of this regime for women’s citizenship in the postcolonial nation-building processes of the twentieth century. I aim to illustrate the connections between gender, violence and citizenship that are implicated in outcomes for justice for Magdalen survivors and victims, as well as conceptions of Irish women’s citizenship in general. In this discussion I consider the Magdalen campaigns for justice as significant for the individual women and families involved, as well as the entire nation’s conception of self as represented in history.
@article{gleeson_womans_2017,
	title = {A {Woman}’s {Work} is… {Unfinished} {Business}: {Justice} for the {Disappeared} {Magdalen} {Women} of {Modern} {Ireland}},
	volume = {25},
	issn = {1572-8455},
	shorttitle = {A {Woman}’s {Work} is… {Unfinished} {Business}},
	url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/s10691-017-9357-9},
	doi = {10.1007/s10691-017-9357-9},
	abstract = {In this article I explore one core feature of contemporary campaigns for justice for Ireland’s Magdalen women concerning their deaths and disappearances, which continue to be denied by a State that has only recently started to acknowledge civilian deaths in other contexts such as armed conflict. I examine the treatment of the disappeared and deceased Magdalen women in the economic and political context of the Irish use of religious institutions and consider the significance of this regime for women’s citizenship in the postcolonial nation-building processes of the twentieth century. I aim to illustrate the connections between gender, violence and citizenship that are implicated in outcomes for justice for Magdalen survivors and victims, as well as conceptions of Irish women’s citizenship in general. In this discussion I consider the Magdalen campaigns for justice as significant for the individual women and families involved, as well as the entire nation’s conception of self as represented in history.},
	language = {en},
	number = {3},
	urldate = {2021-08-06},
	journal = {Feminist Legal Studies},
	author = {Gleeson, Kate},
	month = nov,
	year = {2017},
	pages = {291--312},
}

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