This paper discusses feminist judgments as a specific vehicle for teaching students to think critically about law. The analysis of appellate judgments forms a central plank of Anglo-Commonwealth and US jurisprudence and legal education. While academic scholarship generally offers various forms of commentary on decided cases, feminist judgment-writing projects have recently embarked on a new form of critical scholarship. Rather than critiquing judgments from a feminist perspective in academic essays, the participants in these projects have set out instead to write alternative judgments, as if they had been one of the judges sitting on the court at the time. After introducing the UK Feminist Judgments Project and describing what is ‘different...
This essay offers a perspective-shifting approach to meeting some of our pedagogical goals in law sc...
Judicial decision-making is not a neutral and logical enterprise that involves applying clear rules ...
The word “feminism” means different things to its many supporters (and undoubtedly, to its detractor...
This paper discusses feminist judgments as a specific vehicle for teaching students to think critica...
The Feminist Judgments Project was a collaboration in which a group of feminist legal scholars wrote...
This conversational-style essay is an exchange among fourteen professors—representing thirteen unive...
This chapter, part of Integrating Doctrine and Diversity: Inclusion and Equity in the Law School Cla...
This chapter, part of Integrating Doctrine and Diversity: Inclusion and Equity in the Law School Cla...
Prompted by two of the premises of feminist judgment-writing projects – that feminist judgments are ...
This conversational-style essay is an exchange among fourteen professors—representing thirteen unive...
While feminist legal scholarship has thrived within universities and in some sectors of legal practi...
This chapter, part of Integrating Doctrine and Diversity: Inclusion and Equity in the Law School Cla...
This article, by Rosemary Hunter, is based on a presentation given at the national training day on L...
In this reflection, we want to explain a project in Australia that extends the feminist judgments pr...
Professor Linda Berger rejoins her Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Opinions of the United States Supre...
This essay offers a perspective-shifting approach to meeting some of our pedagogical goals in law sc...
Judicial decision-making is not a neutral and logical enterprise that involves applying clear rules ...
The word “feminism” means different things to its many supporters (and undoubtedly, to its detractor...
This paper discusses feminist judgments as a specific vehicle for teaching students to think critica...
The Feminist Judgments Project was a collaboration in which a group of feminist legal scholars wrote...
This conversational-style essay is an exchange among fourteen professors—representing thirteen unive...
This chapter, part of Integrating Doctrine and Diversity: Inclusion and Equity in the Law School Cla...
This chapter, part of Integrating Doctrine and Diversity: Inclusion and Equity in the Law School Cla...
Prompted by two of the premises of feminist judgment-writing projects – that feminist judgments are ...
This conversational-style essay is an exchange among fourteen professors—representing thirteen unive...
While feminist legal scholarship has thrived within universities and in some sectors of legal practi...
This chapter, part of Integrating Doctrine and Diversity: Inclusion and Equity in the Law School Cla...
This article, by Rosemary Hunter, is based on a presentation given at the national training day on L...
In this reflection, we want to explain a project in Australia that extends the feminist judgments pr...
Professor Linda Berger rejoins her Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Opinions of the United States Supre...
This essay offers a perspective-shifting approach to meeting some of our pedagogical goals in law sc...
Judicial decision-making is not a neutral and logical enterprise that involves applying clear rules ...
The word “feminism” means different things to its many supporters (and undoubtedly, to its detractor...