The history of the law’s treatment of working women is largely a history of the law’s treatment of women’s bodies. Overwhelmingly created by male judges, that jurisprudence considers women from a remove—their physicality, their reproductive capacity, their stature, their sexuality—eclipsing meaningful consideration of their lived experience, on or off the job. As vividly illustrated by so many of the alternative rulings contained in Feminist Judgments, that erasure resulted in Supreme Court decisions that—even when they came out the “right” way, that is, in favor of the female litigant—squandered opportunities for advancing sex equality. The tantalizing notion of “what might have been” is much of the pleasure in reading this collection, of ...
The Feminist Judgments Project was a collaboration in which a group of feminist legal scholars wrote...
\u27Is it possible to be both a judge and a feminist?\u27 Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Criminal Law...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...
The history of the law’s treatment of working women is largely a history of the law’s treatment of w...
While feminist legal scholarship has thrived within universities and in some sectors of legal practi...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...
The word “feminism” means different things to its many supporters (and undoubtedly, to its detractor...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...
Attuned to the social contexts within which laws are created, feminist lawyers, historians, and acti...
In the 1970s feminist legal theory furthered feminist legal practice. Feminist lawyers saw themselve...
Book Chapter United States v. Virginia, 518 US 515 (1996), in Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Opinions...
Women And The Law is a pioneering study of the way in which the law has treated women – at work, in ...
In 1995, the authors of a law review article examining “feminist judging” focused on the existing so...
The U.S. Feminist Judgments Project turns attention to the U.S. Supreme Court. Contributors to this ...
In 1964 the Civil Rights Act was passed into law. Title VII of this act provided a means for equal o...
The Feminist Judgments Project was a collaboration in which a group of feminist legal scholars wrote...
\u27Is it possible to be both a judge and a feminist?\u27 Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Criminal Law...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...
The history of the law’s treatment of working women is largely a history of the law’s treatment of w...
While feminist legal scholarship has thrived within universities and in some sectors of legal practi...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...
The word “feminism” means different things to its many supporters (and undoubtedly, to its detractor...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...
Attuned to the social contexts within which laws are created, feminist lawyers, historians, and acti...
In the 1970s feminist legal theory furthered feminist legal practice. Feminist lawyers saw themselve...
Book Chapter United States v. Virginia, 518 US 515 (1996), in Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Opinions...
Women And The Law is a pioneering study of the way in which the law has treated women – at work, in ...
In 1995, the authors of a law review article examining “feminist judging” focused on the existing so...
The U.S. Feminist Judgments Project turns attention to the U.S. Supreme Court. Contributors to this ...
In 1964 the Civil Rights Act was passed into law. Title VII of this act provided a means for equal o...
The Feminist Judgments Project was a collaboration in which a group of feminist legal scholars wrote...
\u27Is it possible to be both a judge and a feminist?\u27 Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Criminal Law...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...