In Congressional Power to Effect Sex Equality, Patricia Seith argues that legal and social science commentary on the ratification failure of the Equal Rights Amendment ( ERA ) does not properly account for the legislative gains achieved by the Economic Equity Act ( Equity Act ). In drawing attention to the Equity Act, Seith\u27s account challenges common explanations of the source of women\u27s equality gains, particularly the narratives offered by legal commentators who typically focus on the role of the Constitution and the courts. As Seith points out, the conventional account in legal history focuses on the effectuation of a de facto ERA, a series of Supreme Court decisions interpreting the Equal Protection Clause, which some claim ach...
It is argued that the equitable remedies of injunction and specific performance have become routine ...
This Article discusses the two rubrics under which gender-based classifications in the law might be ...
A booklet detailing sixty points of inequality against women in the United States. The author argu...
In Congressional Power to Effect Sex Equality, Patricia Seith argues that legal and social science c...
The Equal Rights Amendment: Will it do so little, we don\u27t need it -or so much, we shouldn\u27t h...
American civil rights regulation is generally understood as relying on private enforcement in courts...
This Note proceeds in three Parts. Part One chronicles the history of the Equal Rights Amendment, fr...
Uncertainty persists regarding the meaning and application of the constitutional right of substantiv...
For over 3 decades, those engaged in the battle over the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), along with ma...
You have heard a lot this morning about the need in 1964 for Congress to enact prohibitions against ...
This article analyzes women’s rights advocacy and its impact on the meanings of gender equality duri...
In the present legal structure, some laws exclude women from legalrights, opportunities, or responsi...
This piece was submitted in connection with the 2022 Symposium The Equal Rights Amendment: A New Gua...
Scholars have largely treated the reintroduction of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) after its ratif...
(Excerpt) Contrary to the belief of eighty percent of Americans, the U.S. Constitution does not proh...
It is argued that the equitable remedies of injunction and specific performance have become routine ...
This Article discusses the two rubrics under which gender-based classifications in the law might be ...
A booklet detailing sixty points of inequality against women in the United States. The author argu...
In Congressional Power to Effect Sex Equality, Patricia Seith argues that legal and social science c...
The Equal Rights Amendment: Will it do so little, we don\u27t need it -or so much, we shouldn\u27t h...
American civil rights regulation is generally understood as relying on private enforcement in courts...
This Note proceeds in three Parts. Part One chronicles the history of the Equal Rights Amendment, fr...
Uncertainty persists regarding the meaning and application of the constitutional right of substantiv...
For over 3 decades, those engaged in the battle over the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), along with ma...
You have heard a lot this morning about the need in 1964 for Congress to enact prohibitions against ...
This article analyzes women’s rights advocacy and its impact on the meanings of gender equality duri...
In the present legal structure, some laws exclude women from legalrights, opportunities, or responsi...
This piece was submitted in connection with the 2022 Symposium The Equal Rights Amendment: A New Gua...
Scholars have largely treated the reintroduction of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) after its ratif...
(Excerpt) Contrary to the belief of eighty percent of Americans, the U.S. Constitution does not proh...
It is argued that the equitable remedies of injunction and specific performance have become routine ...
This Article discusses the two rubrics under which gender-based classifications in the law might be ...
A booklet detailing sixty points of inequality against women in the United States. The author argu...