A World of Widows provides a global overview of the status for
widowhood. Neglected by social policy researches, international human
rights activists and the women's movement, the status of the world's
widows - legal, social, cultural, and economic - is an urgent issue
given the extent and the severity of the discrimination against them.
Margaret Own explores the process of becoming a widow; poverty and
social security in the context of widowhood; differing laws and customs
regarding widow's inheritance; the situation of widows who remarry and
issues of sexuality and health. She also looks at the needs of specific
groups of widows - refugees, older widows, child widows - and widowhood
in the context of AIDS. Throughout, she shows the prevalence of
discrimination against widows in inheritance rights, land ownership,
custody of children, security of home and shelter, nutrition and health.
The book concludes with a summary of widowhood as a human rights issues
and an overview of widows themselves organising for change.