Feminist legal scholars argue that the rigid, formalist approach towards judicial decision-making is potentially harmful to the lives, experiences, and interests of women. In critically analysing a feminist re-judgement within Feminist Judgments From Theory to Practice, this dissertation argues that the Feminist Judgments Project represents a legitimate and valuable approach, which effectively re-imagines judicial decision-making in line with women’s interests. This dissertation reinforces feminist judicial decision-making as a more responsive form of judgment making particularly for vulnerable and marginalised women whom regularly experience and are subjected to traditional judicial approaches. Further, the dissertation argues that femini...
This chapter, part of Integrating Doctrine and Diversity: Inclusion and Equity in the Law School Cla...
Feminist Judgments’s focus on jurists alone is not unusual. My own discipline has devoted a great de...
Much of the literature on feminist judging concentrates on judges and judging in appellate and super...
The word “feminism” means different things to its many supporters (and undoubtedly, to its detractor...
The U.S. Feminist Judgments Project turns attention to the U.S. Supreme Court. Contributors to this ...
In 1995, the authors of a law review article examining “feminist judging” focused on the existing so...
While feminist legal scholarship has thrived within universities and in some sectors of legal practi...
Judicial decision-making is not a neutral and logical enterprise that involves applying clear rules ...
Professor Linda Berger rejoins her Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Opinions of the United States Supre...
The Feminist Judgments Project was a collaboration in which a group of feminist legal scholars wrote...
This article, by Rosemary Hunter, is based on a presentation given at the national training day on L...
Prompted by two of the premises of feminist judgment-writing projects – that feminist judgments are ...
• What different legal outcomes might have been produced through feminist legal reasoning in leading...
This paper discusses feminist judgments as a specific vehicle for teaching students to think critica...
This chapter, part of Integrating Doctrine and Diversity: Inclusion and Equity in the Law School Cla...
Feminist Judgments’s focus on jurists alone is not unusual. My own discipline has devoted a great de...
Much of the literature on feminist judging concentrates on judges and judging in appellate and super...
The word “feminism” means different things to its many supporters (and undoubtedly, to its detractor...
The U.S. Feminist Judgments Project turns attention to the U.S. Supreme Court. Contributors to this ...
In 1995, the authors of a law review article examining “feminist judging” focused on the existing so...
While feminist legal scholarship has thrived within universities and in some sectors of legal practi...
Judicial decision-making is not a neutral and logical enterprise that involves applying clear rules ...
Professor Linda Berger rejoins her Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Opinions of the United States Supre...
The Feminist Judgments Project was a collaboration in which a group of feminist legal scholars wrote...
This article, by Rosemary Hunter, is based on a presentation given at the national training day on L...
Prompted by two of the premises of feminist judgment-writing projects – that feminist judgments are ...
• What different legal outcomes might have been produced through feminist legal reasoning in leading...
This paper discusses feminist judgments as a specific vehicle for teaching students to think critica...
This chapter, part of Integrating Doctrine and Diversity: Inclusion and Equity in the Law School Cla...
Feminist Judgments’s focus on jurists alone is not unusual. My own discipline has devoted a great de...
Much of the literature on feminist judging concentrates on judges and judging in appellate and super...