'A newborn of respectable class would have weighed more' : Class, gender and child neglect in late-nineteenth century England
Pimm-Smith, R
Date: 8 June 2022
Article
Journal
Child and Family Law Quarterly
Publisher
Family Law
Abstract
This article explores how child neglect was criminalised during the period that the first statutory offence existed but was not enforced. The article addresses a gap in scholarship by exploring the Victorian origins of
the neglect law and the ways it disproportionately penalised poor families when a child suffered from a lack
of ...
This article explores how child neglect was criminalised during the period that the first statutory offence existed but was not enforced. The article addresses a gap in scholarship by exploring the Victorian origins of
the neglect law and the ways it disproportionately penalised poor families when a child suffered from a lack
of material provision. This was particularly true for biological mothers and a limited number of biological fathers who were treated more harshly by Victorian juries if they transgressed middle-class expectations of
gender. Class conflict and gender bias featured heavily in the trials involving neglectful parenting which, this
article asserts, provides another example of the ways that the poor were punished for their economic misfortune during the late-nineteenth century. Understanding the effectiveness of enforcement during this period is
important because of the heavy reliance of modern neglect law on Victorian legislation.
Law School
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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