Looking back, the legal reforms of the past 20 years have substantially rewritten the images of marriage and family relationships in law. For many years, the Taiwan Women's Movement has criticized and challenged the bad law of husband and fatherhood. After a major overhaul, it has been replaced by a new law that treats men and women equally. This article will use the historical investigation of legal reform, the examination of empirical phenomena, and the analysis of feminist legal theory to describe the trajectory of legal reform along the women's movement, indicating that women's situation is still unequal.This article reviews the appropriateness of explaining the status quo with a gap study, and points out the two major dilemmas of the women's movement and law-repairing movement. In theory, such research will help to reflect on the plight of liberal legal reform and understand the relationship between law and society; in practice, it can serve as an opportunity for the women's movement to face the past and look to the future.
<<