Sex inequality still exists. However, its manifestations have evolved since the early sex inequality cases were heard in courts and legislatures first began structuring statutory regimes to combat it. In particular, so-called facial discrimination against men and women on the basis of sex has no doubt decreased since the advent of this legal assault on sex inequality. Yet the gendered assumptions that structure our institutions and interactions have proven resilient. With sex discrimination now operating more covertly, the problem of sex inequality looks considerably different than it once did. Courts, however, have failed to successfully respond to the changing contours of sex inequality, allowing the problem to manifest itself in ways t...
During the 1980s and early 1990s intense disagreement has arisen over the appropriate strategy for e...
As we think about the future role the judicial branch will play in our governance, we might consider...
This Article looks back to the early equal protection jurisprudence of the 1970s and Ruth Bader Gins...
Sex inequality still exists. However, its manifestations have evolved since the early sex inequality...
The courts have not wholeheartedly embraced the idea of equality of the sexes, and therefore do not ...
The fiftieth anniversary of Title VII\u27s ban on sex discrimination provides an occasion to reflect...
In the standard account, American sex equality law rests on a partial and imperfect analogy to race,...
Contemporary sex discrimination jurisprudence accepts as one of its foundational premises the notion...
This Essay asks why sex equality is outside the constitutional canon. While race discrimination is a...
The fiftieth anniversary of Title VII’s ban on sex discrimination provides an occasion to reflect on...
American law, whether in the shape of legislation, court decisions, or administrative action, contin...
Sex discrimination law has not kept pace with the lived experience of discrimination. In the early y...
Has litigation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 reached the limit of its utility in a...
Most accounts of the Supreme Court’s equal protection jurisprudence describe the Court’s firm opposi...
This Article highlights both the rewards in accepting and the risks in rejecting a claim of sex disc...
During the 1980s and early 1990s intense disagreement has arisen over the appropriate strategy for e...
As we think about the future role the judicial branch will play in our governance, we might consider...
This Article looks back to the early equal protection jurisprudence of the 1970s and Ruth Bader Gins...
Sex inequality still exists. However, its manifestations have evolved since the early sex inequality...
The courts have not wholeheartedly embraced the idea of equality of the sexes, and therefore do not ...
The fiftieth anniversary of Title VII\u27s ban on sex discrimination provides an occasion to reflect...
In the standard account, American sex equality law rests on a partial and imperfect analogy to race,...
Contemporary sex discrimination jurisprudence accepts as one of its foundational premises the notion...
This Essay asks why sex equality is outside the constitutional canon. While race discrimination is a...
The fiftieth anniversary of Title VII’s ban on sex discrimination provides an occasion to reflect on...
American law, whether in the shape of legislation, court decisions, or administrative action, contin...
Sex discrimination law has not kept pace with the lived experience of discrimination. In the early y...
Has litigation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 reached the limit of its utility in a...
Most accounts of the Supreme Court’s equal protection jurisprudence describe the Court’s firm opposi...
This Article highlights both the rewards in accepting and the risks in rejecting a claim of sex disc...
During the 1980s and early 1990s intense disagreement has arisen over the appropriate strategy for e...
As we think about the future role the judicial branch will play in our governance, we might consider...
This Article looks back to the early equal protection jurisprudence of the 1970s and Ruth Bader Gins...