This article was inspired by the work of a series of state task forces on women in the courts. It examines the subject from a historical perspective, comparing ancient Rome, mainly during the period from the first century B.C. to the third A.D., with the United States, from its prerevolutionary beginnings to the present. The article\u27s focus is gender bias against women acting in official court functions
A Review of Law, Sex, and Christian Society in Medieval Europe by James A. Brundag
According to the conventional domestic violence narrative, judges historically have ignored or even ...
This Article looks back to the early equal protection jurisprudence of the 1970s and Ruth Bader Gins...
This article was inspired by the work of a series of state task forces on women in the courts. It ex...
Women and the Constitution: Presentation from the 1987 Eighth Circuit Judicial Conference, Colorado ...
Roman Antiquity and Colonial America shared much in common regarding limits on women’s legal rights ...
This article will suggest that legal education has failed to represent the significant contributions...
The report of the Gender Bias Study of the Supreme Judicial Court of the Commonwealth of Massachuset...
Beginning with the state courts of New Jersey in 1984, almost every state in the country and numerou...
For many years, women who work (or who have tried to work) with law and in courts have understood th...
How did early American tort law treat women? How were they expected to behave, and how were others ...
This article presents statistics on the number of women in the judiciary and argues for gender parit...
In 1873 the U.S. Supreme Court denied Myra Bradwell the right to practice law, holding the paramoun...
In 2004, the Indiana Supreme Court Race and Gender Commission undertook a large survey of lawyers\u2...
A key question for legal scholars and political scientists is whether women jurists judge differentl...
A Review of Law, Sex, and Christian Society in Medieval Europe by James A. Brundag
According to the conventional domestic violence narrative, judges historically have ignored or even ...
This Article looks back to the early equal protection jurisprudence of the 1970s and Ruth Bader Gins...
This article was inspired by the work of a series of state task forces on women in the courts. It ex...
Women and the Constitution: Presentation from the 1987 Eighth Circuit Judicial Conference, Colorado ...
Roman Antiquity and Colonial America shared much in common regarding limits on women’s legal rights ...
This article will suggest that legal education has failed to represent the significant contributions...
The report of the Gender Bias Study of the Supreme Judicial Court of the Commonwealth of Massachuset...
Beginning with the state courts of New Jersey in 1984, almost every state in the country and numerou...
For many years, women who work (or who have tried to work) with law and in courts have understood th...
How did early American tort law treat women? How were they expected to behave, and how were others ...
This article presents statistics on the number of women in the judiciary and argues for gender parit...
In 1873 the U.S. Supreme Court denied Myra Bradwell the right to practice law, holding the paramoun...
In 2004, the Indiana Supreme Court Race and Gender Commission undertook a large survey of lawyers\u2...
A key question for legal scholars and political scientists is whether women jurists judge differentl...
A Review of Law, Sex, and Christian Society in Medieval Europe by James A. Brundag
According to the conventional domestic violence narrative, judges historically have ignored or even ...
This Article looks back to the early equal protection jurisprudence of the 1970s and Ruth Bader Gins...