The Feminist Judgment Projects are collaborations of hundreds of feminist jurists who reimagine and rewrite key judicial decisions from a feminist perspec- tive. Their aim is to reconsider judgments that have failed to address fundamental issues surrounding gender equality and sexual autonomy. In this article, after an introduction into the topic and methodology of Feminist Judgments, the relevant sections of the Australian judgment Johnson v. Ramsden [2019] WASC 84 are thus rewritten. The case concerned a woman who was pinched on the bottom by a stranger – in this case a policeman – during a group photo- graph at a charity event. The judge had maintained that the conduct in question does not amount to sexual harassment because a person’s b...
The Feminist Judgments book series and the #MeToo movement share the feminist method of narrative. F...
The courtroom is a space filled with judgments that last a lifetime. In sexual offences cases, this ...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...
One of the enduring problems identifi ed by feminist legal scholars is the difficulty of implementin...
\u27Is it possible to be both a judge and a feminist?\u27 Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Criminal Law...
Australian Feminist Judgments is a collection of fictional judgments for real Australian cases that ...
The word “feminism” means different things to its many supporters (and undoubtedly, to its detractor...
The Feminist Judgments Project was a collaboration in which a group of feminist legal scholars wrote...
This book brings together feminist academics and lawyers to present an impressive collection of alte...
The Feminist Judgments book series and the #MeToo movement share the feminist method of narrative. F...
Prompted by two of the premises of feminist judgment-writing projects – that feminist judgments are ...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...
Book Chapter United States v. Virginia, 518 US 515 (1996), in Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Opinions...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...
While feminist legal scholarship has thrived within universities and in some sectors of legal practi...
The Feminist Judgments book series and the #MeToo movement share the feminist method of narrative. F...
The courtroom is a space filled with judgments that last a lifetime. In sexual offences cases, this ...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...
One of the enduring problems identifi ed by feminist legal scholars is the difficulty of implementin...
\u27Is it possible to be both a judge and a feminist?\u27 Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Criminal Law...
Australian Feminist Judgments is a collection of fictional judgments for real Australian cases that ...
The word “feminism” means different things to its many supporters (and undoubtedly, to its detractor...
The Feminist Judgments Project was a collaboration in which a group of feminist legal scholars wrote...
This book brings together feminist academics and lawyers to present an impressive collection of alte...
The Feminist Judgments book series and the #MeToo movement share the feminist method of narrative. F...
Prompted by two of the premises of feminist judgment-writing projects – that feminist judgments are ...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...
Book Chapter United States v. Virginia, 518 US 515 (1996), in Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Opinions...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...
While feminist legal scholarship has thrived within universities and in some sectors of legal practi...
The Feminist Judgments book series and the #MeToo movement share the feminist method of narrative. F...
The courtroom is a space filled with judgments that last a lifetime. In sexual offences cases, this ...
What would United States Supreme Court opinions look like if key decisions on gender issues were wri...