In the spring of 1971, I attended the first Women and the Law conference, held in New Haven and organized by Yale Law School students. At that time only two women in the history of the United States had ever sat on an Article III federal appellate bench: Florence Allen, appointed by President Roosevelt to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in 1934; and Shirley Hufstedler, appointed by President Johnson to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in 1968
I work in a law school building that is named for Jane M.G. Foster, who donated the money for its co...
As the New York Times noted in 1971, Mildred Lillie fortunately had no children. Even in her fifties...
Women and the Constitution: Presentation from the 1987 Eighth Circuit Judicial Conference, Colorado ...
In the spring of 1971, I attended the first Women and the Law conference, held in New Haven and orga...
Professor Ruth Bader Ginsburg of Columbia Law School was the leading Supreme Court litigator for gen...
Michigan women thriye on the bench; alums ascend to high offices; Ginger\u27s book profiles a legal ...
A special concern of this paper is the presence of women at the top of the judicial hierarchy. Under...
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg made headlines when she said that she would be satisfied with the number...
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg changed the world—but she especially changed the world for women like us...
I want to welcome back Justice Ginsburg to Columbia Law School. She has been a frequent visitor sinc...
Four women have served as Associate Justices on the United States Supreme Court. Since the Court’s i...
Rereading my November 2, 1978 remarks, I am heartened by the changes from that day to today. As Joa...
With this issue, we begin a dialogue on women and the law. We are interested in receiving brief comm...
This paper examines Justice Ginsburg’s history, her impassioned activism on behalf of the American C...
In 1978, political scientist Beverly Blair Cook wrote Women Judges: The End of Tokenism for a public...
I work in a law school building that is named for Jane M.G. Foster, who donated the money for its co...
As the New York Times noted in 1971, Mildred Lillie fortunately had no children. Even in her fifties...
Women and the Constitution: Presentation from the 1987 Eighth Circuit Judicial Conference, Colorado ...
In the spring of 1971, I attended the first Women and the Law conference, held in New Haven and orga...
Professor Ruth Bader Ginsburg of Columbia Law School was the leading Supreme Court litigator for gen...
Michigan women thriye on the bench; alums ascend to high offices; Ginger\u27s book profiles a legal ...
A special concern of this paper is the presence of women at the top of the judicial hierarchy. Under...
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg made headlines when she said that she would be satisfied with the number...
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg changed the world—but she especially changed the world for women like us...
I want to welcome back Justice Ginsburg to Columbia Law School. She has been a frequent visitor sinc...
Four women have served as Associate Justices on the United States Supreme Court. Since the Court’s i...
Rereading my November 2, 1978 remarks, I am heartened by the changes from that day to today. As Joa...
With this issue, we begin a dialogue on women and the law. We are interested in receiving brief comm...
This paper examines Justice Ginsburg’s history, her impassioned activism on behalf of the American C...
In 1978, political scientist Beverly Blair Cook wrote Women Judges: The End of Tokenism for a public...
I work in a law school building that is named for Jane M.G. Foster, who donated the money for its co...
As the New York Times noted in 1971, Mildred Lillie fortunately had no children. Even in her fifties...
Women and the Constitution: Presentation from the 1987 Eighth Circuit Judicial Conference, Colorado ...