AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYearEthnicity in Title or SummaryGender in Title or Summary
André B. Rosay , Professor of Justice & Associate Dean, College of Health, University of Alaska Anchorage NATIONAL SURVEY ESTIMATES OF VIOLENCE AGAINST AMERICAN INDIAN AND ALASKA NATIVE PEOPLE 69 Department of Justice Journal of Federal Law and Practice 91 (January, 2021) When one in three Native American women will be raped in their lifetimes, that is an assault on our national conscience; it is an affront to our shared humanity; it is something that we cannot allow to continue. Advocates, researchers, practitioners, and policymakers are increasingly working together to raise awareness on the level of violence... 2021 American Indian/Alaskan Native  
Amanda M. Fisher NEW BEGINNINGS: A FEMINIST EVALUATION OF GENDERED STIGMA IN THE MODERN LEGAL PROFESSION 19 Rutgers Journal of Law & Public Policy 161 (Fall, 2021) The modern woman lawyer faces many of the same challenges that women in law faced during their earliest entry into the profession. While circumstances have certainly improved for women in law, gendered stigma is still prevalent in the profession. In this article, gendered stigma refers to circumstances resulting from one's gender as a salient... 2021    
Jessica Tueller NOT HERS ALONE: VICTIM STANDING BEFORE THE CEDAW COMMITTEE AFTER M.W. v. DENMARK 131 Yale Law Journal 256 (October, 2021) M.W. v. Denmark constitutes the first case in which the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW Committee) granted victim standing to an individual who did not identify as a woman to allege a violation of their rights under the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW).... 2021    
Chinyere Ezie NOT YOUR MULE? DISRUPTING THE POLITICAL POWERLESSNESS OF BLACK WOMEN VOTERS 92 University of Colorado Law Review 659 (Summer, 2021) On the one hundredth anniversary of the Nineteenth Amendment, this Article reflects on the legacy of Black women voters. The Article hypothesizes that even though suffrage was hard fought, it has not been a vehicle for Black women to meaningfully advance their political concerns. Instead, an inverse relationship exists between Black women's... 2021 African/Black American Yes
Zsea Bowmani NOW IS THE TIME FOR BLACK QUEER FEMINIST ECOLOGY 30 Tulane Journal of Law & Sexuality 123 (2021) In 1982, the late Black lesbian womanist and civil rights activist Audre Lorde aptly explained that [t]here is no such thing as a single-issue struggle, because we do not lead single-issue lives. Yet, the law and the legal academy continue to compartmentalize the diversity of life into single-issue subject areas. Criminal Law. Labor Law.... 2021 African/Black American  
H. Timothy Lovelace, Jr. OF PROTEST AND PROPERTY: AN ESSAY IN PURSUIT OF JUSTICE FOR BREONNA TAYLOR 116 Northwestern University Law Review Online 23 (May 13, 2021) In March 2020, Louisville police officers fatally shot Breonna Taylor in her apartment while executing a no-knock warrant. There was great outrage over the killing of the innocent woman, and Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron led an investigation of the officer-involved shooting. Activists protested in Louisville after Taylor's... 2021    
Renee Nicole Allen OUR COLLECTIVE WORK, OUR COLLECTIVE STRENGTH 73 Rutgers University Law Review 881 (Spring, 2021) This essay considers the collective strength of women of color in two contexts: when we are well represented on law school faculties and when we contribute to accomplishing stated institutional diversity goals. Critical mass is broadly defined as a sufficient number of people of color. Though the concept has been socially appropriated, its origins... 2021    
Jordan Buckwald OUTRUNNING BIAS: UNMASKING THE JUSTIFICATIONS FOR EXCLUDING NON-BINARY ATHLETES IN ELITE SPORT 44 Harvard Journal of Law & Gender 1 (Winter, 2021) The inclusion of intersex and transgender athletes in sport has long been the subject of vigorous debate. Elite sport governing bodies like the International Association of Athletics Federations have attempted to articulate policies limiting the extent to which such athletes can compete in the female category. The most common reasons given to... 2021    
Cindy A. Schipani , Terry Morehead Dworkin , Devin Abney OVERCOMING GENDER DISCRIMINATION IN BUSINESS: RECONSIDERING MENTORING IN THE POST #ME-TOO AND COVID-19 ERAS 23 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Business Law 1072 (2021) I. Origins of Female Mentorship: How Female Mentorship Countered Historical Systems Of Patriarchal Inequality in the United States. 1074 II. The Perception of Women in the Workplace. 1081 III. The Post-#MeToo Era Divide. 1086 IV. The Benefits of Women Mentoring Men. 1090 V. The COVID-19 Crisis: Challenges and Opportunities. 1098 VI. Conclusion.... 2021    
Lario Albarrán OWNING FRIDA KAHLO 35 Emory International Law Review 627 (2021) --Hayden Herrera Frida Kahlo is undoubtedly one of the most recognizable names in art history. Her work epitomizes Mexican national and indigenous traditions and is regarded as an uncompromising depiction of the female experience and form. But her fame go 2021 American Indian/Alaskan Native  
Khiara M. Bridges PREGNANCY AND THE CARCERAL STATE 119 Michigan Law Review 1187 (April, 2021) Policing the Womb: Invisible Women and the Criminalization of Motherhood. By Michele Goodwin. Cambridge University Press. 2020. Pp. xiv, 323. $29.99. In December 2018, Marshae Jones was five months pregnant when she got into an altercation with another woman, Ebony Jemison, in the parking lot of a Dollar General store in Pleasant Grove, Alabama.... 2021    
Jennifer Bennett Shinall PROTECTING PREGNANCY 106 Cornell Law Review 987 (May, 2021) Laws to assist pregnant women in the workplace are gaining legislative momentum, both at the state and federal levels. Last year alone, four such laws went into effect at the state level, and federal legislation advanced farther than ever before in the House of Representatives. Four types of legislative protections for pregnant workers currently... 2021    
Stewart Chang , Frank Rudy Cooper , Addie C. Rolnick RACE AND GENDER AND POLICING 21 Nevada Law Journal 885 (Spring, 2021) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 885 I. Unrest and the Question of Looting. 891 II. The Black Perspective on Looting. 898 III. Policing, Property, and White Patriarchy. 904 A. Christian Cooper: White Caller Crime. 905 B. Jannie Ligons: The Sexual Non-Privilege of Black Women. 910 C. Sandra Bland and Elijah Taylor: Suspicion, Policing, and the... 2021    
Tracy Thomas RECLAIMING THE LONG HISTORY OF THE "IRRELEVANT" NINETEENTH AMENDMENT FOR GENDER EQUALITY 105 Minnesota Law Review 2623 (June, 2021) The Nineteenth Amendment has been called an irrelevant amendment. The women's suffrage amendment has been deemed irrelevant as a constitutional authority and reduced to a historical footnote. As Supreme Court Justice John Harlan noted, The Nineteenth Amendment merely gives the vote to women. With that simple task accomplished, the amendment has... 2021    
Judith Resnik REPRESENTING WHAT? GENDER, RACE, CLASS, AND THE STRUGGLE FOR THE IDENTITY AND THE LEGITIMACY OF COURTS 15 Law & Ethics of Human Rights 1 (May, 2021) https://doi.org/10.1515/lehr-2021-2022 In 1935, when the U.S. Supreme Court's new building opened and displayed the phrase Equal Justice Under Law, racial segregation was commonplace, as were barriers limiting opportunities for men and women of all colors to participate in economic and political life. The justices on the Court and the... 2021    
Arianne Shahvisi, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, a.shahvisi@bsms.ac.uk RESISTING WRONGFUL EXPLANATIONS 19 Journal of Ethics & Social Philosophy 168 (February, 2021) In the 2017 series of the UK reality television show The Apprentice, a group of women discussed a sales strategy for maximizing the revenue of their burger stand in London's financial sector. Celebrity businessperson Karren Brady eavesdropped on their conversation. One contestant remarked that since the financial sector is male dominated, they... 2021    
Megan Mallonee SELECTIVE JUSTICE: A CRISIS OF MISSING AND MURDERED ALASKA NATIVE WOMEN 38 Alaska Law Review 93 (June, 2021) Across the country, Indigenous women are murdered more than any other population and go missing at disproportionate rates. This crisis of missing and murdered Indigenous women is amplified in Alaska, where the vast landscape, a confusing jurisdictional scheme, and a history of systemic racism all create significant barriers to justice for Alaska... 2021 American Indian/Alaskan Native Yes
Todd A. DeMitchell, Ed.D, Christine Rienstra Kiracofe, Ed.D., Richard Fossey, J.D., Ed.D., Nathan E. Fellman, M.Ed., Ed.S. (ABD, Ph.D.) SKIRTS, YES, PANTS, NO: GENDER SPECIFIC DRESS CODES, AND "ANCIENT AND ABSURD CUSTOMS"? PELTIER v. CHARTER DAY SCHOOL, INC. 393 West's Education Law Reporter 471 (November 11, 2021) No, this is not 1821 or 1921. It's 2021. Women serve in combat units of our armed forces. Women walk in space and contribute their talents at the International Space Station. Women serve on our country's Supreme Court, in Congress, and, today, a woman is Vice President of the United States. Clothing once considered taboo is now permitted as more... 2021    
Michelle S. Jacobs SOMETIMES THEY DON'T DIE: CAN CRIMINAL JUSTICE REFORM MEASURES HELP HALT POLICE SEXUAL ASSAULT ON BLACK WOMEN? 44 Harvard Journal of Law & Gender 251 (Spring, 2021) In the eighteen months between March 2019 and August 2020, at least eight Black women were murdered by the police. Breonna Taylor was one of them. Officer Brett Hankison, one of the three officers who murdered Breonna Taylor, was eventually discharged from the Louisville Police Department. In the memo discharging him, the police chief cited... 2021 African/Black American Yes
Kimberly Mutcherson TAKING OUR SPACE: WOMEN OF COLOR AND ANTIRACISM IN LEGAL ACADEMIA 73 Rutgers University Law Review 869 (Spring, 2021) [I]f I didn't define myself for myself, I would be crunched into other people's fantasies for me and eaten alive. Space--physical and metaphorical--is at the center of the collection of essays by women of color law professors and deans in this volume. The authors wrote their essays in contemplation of a roundtable discussion held virtually at... 2021   Yes
Hayley Hahn TERMITES IN THE MASTER'S HOUSE: ABORTION RAP AND FLORYNCE KENNEDY'S CONTRIBUTIONS TO RACIAL AND GENDER JUSTICE 107 Virginia Law Review Online 48 (January, 2021) [N]ever . take any shit from anyone. This attitude guided radical Black feminist Florynce Flo Kennedy's life and advocacy. Contemporaries recognized Kennedy as an outspoken activist for the rights of African Americans, women, sex workers, and members of the LGBT community. In this way, Kennedy united social movements with divergent agendas.... 2021    
Brianna N. Banks THE (DE)VALUATION OF BLACK WOMEN'S BODIES 44 Harvard Journal of Law & Gender 329 (Spring, 2021) In recent years, the tragic stories of Chrystul Kizer and Cyntoia Brown have entered the national stage. Their stories, and many others, have brought the devaluation of Black and brown women's bodies in the criminal justice system to the forefront of American discourse. Through their stories, this paper analyzes Black women's place in society from... 2021 African/Black American Yes
Tsedale M. Melaku THE AWAKENING: THE IMPACT OF COVID-19, RACIAL UPHEAVAL, AND POLITICAL POLARIZATION ON BLACK WOMEN LAWYERS 89 Fordham Law Review 2519 (May, 2021) Concrete barriers have always played a significant role in preventing Black lawyers from reaching the coveted position of partner in law firms. These barriers include an inability to gain initial access of entry into firms, the lack of professional development and training, and being shut out of networking opportunities and sponsorship. Compounded... 2021 African/Black American Yes
Alena M. Allen THE EMOTIONAL WOMAN 99 North Carolina Law Review 1027 (May, 2021) The emotional woman is nonexistent in the common law, but the reasonable man is an indelible figure. Conceptions of reasonableness permeate nearly every aspect of the law while emotion is largely absent. The reasonable man determines negligence. Reasonable minds determine whether a contract has been formed. Reasonable doubt stands between freedom... 2021   Yes
Elizabeth A. Brown THE FEMTECH PARADOX: HOW WORKPLACE MONITORING THREATENS WOMEN'S EQUITY 61 Jurimetrics Journal 289 (Spring, 2021) As biometric monitoring becomes increasingly common in workplace wellness programs, there are three reasons to believe that women will suffer disproportionately from the data collection associated with it. First, many forms of biometric monitoring are subject to gender bias, among other potential biases, because of assumptions inherent in... 2021   Yes
Loren Jacobson THE FIRST AMENDMENT AND THE FEMALE LISTENER 51 New Mexico Law Review 70 (Winter, 2021) When the Supreme Court has considered whether laws that affect women's decisions about their health and bodies violate the Free Speech Clause, it has ignored the informational needs of the very women that such laws regulate. I argue that, instead, the Supreme Court should value women's informational and decision-making needs and properly place them... 2021   Yes
Soundous Bouchouar THE FUTURE IS . ROBOT? WOMEN IN THE WORKFORCE, AUTOMATION, AND TAX POLICY 42 Women's Rights Law Reporter 220 (Spring/Summer, 2021) In 2017, the University of Phoenix released an ad depicting a single mother of two working at a manufacturing company. As time passes, employees are replaced by machines, and eventually, the mother is laid off. One day, the mother finds the motivation to sign up and take courses at the University of Phoenix. She goes on to graduate with a degree in... 2021   Yes
Kyle C. Velte THE NINETEENTH AMENDMENT AS A GENERATIVE TOOL FOR DEFEATING LGBT RELIGIOUS EXEMPTIONS 105 Minnesota Law Review 2659 (June, 2021) In the summer of 1920, women gained the right to be free from discrimination in voting when the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified. One hundred years later, in the summer of 2020, LGBT people gained the right to be free from discrimination in the workplace when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Bostock v. Clayton County that sexual orientation and... 2021    
Elizabeth Stout , Andrea Mancuso , Lucia Chomeau Hunt THE PROTECTION FROM ABUSE STATUTE SHOULD BE PROTECTED 36 Maine Bar Journal 124 (2021) January 25, 2021, saw Maine's first domestic violence homicide of the year, a murder suicide in New Sharon. On March 10, 2021, a domestic violence incident resulted in a hostage standoff in Livermore Falls. March 27, 2021, brought news of a murder of a woman in York Beach; the father of her child has been arrested. Every year, approximately half of... 2021    
Melanie Randall THE SHACKLED SEXUAL ASSAULT VICTIM: TRAUMA, RESISTANCE, AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE VIOLATIONS OF AN INDIGENOUS WOMAN 39 Minnesota Journal of Law & Inequality 317 (Summer, 2021) L1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 318 I. Widening the Lens: State Failures and Violence Against Indigenous Peoples and Women in Canada, the US, Australia, and New Zealand. 323 A. The Sexual and Physical Assault Perpetrated Against Angela Cardinal. 334 B. The Preliminary Inquiry. 336 i. The First Layer of Violation: Stigmatizing Ms. Cardinal as a... 2021 American Indian/Alaskan Native Yes
Michelle Y. Ewert THEIR HOME IS NOT THEIR CASTLE: SUBSIDIZED HOUSING'S INTRUSION INTO FAMILY PRIVACY AND DECISIONAL AUTONOMY 99 North Carolina Law Review 869 (May, 2021) The anti-Black racism that has permeated public benefits programs and federal housing policy for over a century persists in subsidized rental housing. Public housing authorities (PHAs) impede the ability of tenants--who are disproportionately Black women--to change household composition as their family situations change. PHAs routinely take... 2021    
Charlotte Franklin TITLE IX ADMINISTERS A BOOSTER SHOT: THE EFFECT OF PRIVATE DONATIONS ON TITLE IX 16 Northwestern Journal of Law & Social Policy 145 (Spring, 2021) Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 (Title IX) prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in federally funded education programs or activities. Since its enactment, Title IX has dramatically increased interscholastic and intercollegiate athletic opportunities for women and girls. Despite indisputable progress since Title IX's enactment,... 2021    
Rachel DiBenedetto TO SHATTER THE GLASS CEILING, CLEAN THE STICKY FLOOR AND THAW THE FROZEN MIDDLE: HOW DISCRIMINATION AND BIAS IN THE CAREER PIPELINE PERPETUATES THE GENDER PAY GAP 29 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 151 (2021) I. Introduction. 152 II. If the Law Differentiated Between People on the Basis of Sex, Then How Will Men and Women Ever Become Equals?. 159 A. Congress Created the Right to Sue. 160 B. The Supreme Court Acknowledged Gender Pay Inequity. 168 III. Gender Pay Disparities in Controlled Groups. 171 A. Workplace Discriminatory Practices. 172 B. Latent... 2021    
Lindsey Webb TRUE CRIME AND DANGER NARRATIVES: REFLECTIONS ON STORIES OF VIOLENCE, RACE, AND (IN)JUSTICE 24 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 131 (Spring, 2021) In the United States, white people have long told both overt and veiled narratives of the purported danger and criminality of people of color. Sometimes known as danger narratives, these gruesome accounts often depict the kidnapping, assault, and murder of white women at the hands of men of color. These narratives have been used to promote and... 2021    
Haley C. Carter UNDER THE GUISE OF "DUE PROCESS": SEXUAL HARASSMENT AND THE IMPACT OF TRUMP'S TITLE IX REGULATIONS ON WOMEN STUDENTS OF COLOR 36 Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law & Justice 180 (2021) Introduction. 181 I. Women Students of Color and Sexual Violence in Schools. 184 A. Reporting at Disproportionately High Rates. 184 B. Contributing Factors to Heightened Vulnerability. 186 II. Obama-Era Title IX Guidance on Sexual Violence. 187 A. Dear Colleague Letter: Sexual Violence. 188 B. Questions and Answers on Title IX and Sexual Violence.... 2021   Yes
Allison M. Whelan UNEQUAL REPRESENTATION: WOMEN IN CLINICAL RESEARCH 106 Cornell Law Review Online 87 (April, 2021) Introduction. 87 I. Historical Background. 89 A. Women's Underrepresentation in Clinical Research. 89 B. Women of Color as Unknowing or Unwilling Participants in Clinical Research. 94 1. James Marion Sims: The Father of Modern Gynecology. 95 2. Puerto Rico Contraception Trials. 97 3. Goldzieher Oral Contraceptive Study. 98 4. Henrietta Lacks. 99... 2021   Yes
Sahar Takshi UNEXPECTED INEQUALITY: DISPARATE-IMPACT FROM ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN HEALTHCARE DECISIONS 34 Journal of Law and Health 215 (April 28, 2021) Systemic discrimination in healthcare plagues marginalized groups. Physicians incorrectly view people of color as having high pain tolerance, leading to undertreatment. Women with disabilities are often undiagnosed because their symptoms are dismissed. Low-income patients have less access to appropriate treatment. These patterns, and others,... 2021    
Alesha Hamilton UNTANGLING DISCRIMINATION: THE CROWN ACT AND PROTECTING BLACK HAIR 89 University of Cincinnati Law Review 483 (2021) Imagine you send your six-year-old son to school for his first day of first grade. You dress him in a tie and a nice shirt and arrive at the school to meet his new teachers. He is bursting with excitement and on his best behavior. However, the school administrators say that your son cannot pursue his education that day--because of his hair. This is... 2021 African/Black American  
Catherine M. Sharkey VALUING BLACK AND FEMALE LIVES: A PROPOSAL FOR INCORPORATING AGENCY VSL INTO TORT DAMAGES 96 Notre Dame Law Review 1479 (March, 2021) Federal agencies adopt a uniform VSL (value of statistical life)--one that does not vary according to demographic characteristics--in conducting cost-benefit analyses in connection with regulatory policy decisions. In sharp juxtaposition, the use of race- and gender-based statistics on wages and work-life expectancy in calculating tort wrongful... 2021 African/Black American Yes
Vanita Saleema Snow VEILING AND INVERTED MASKING 36 Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law & Justice 115 (2021) Introduction. 115 I. The Identity Dichotomy. 120 A. Binary Gender Identity. 122 B. Black and African-American Women: Race Intersects with Gender. 128 C. Muslim Women: Religious Identity Intersects with Gender. 130 D. African-American Muslim Women: The Challenges of Identity Convergence. 134 II. Masking Identity. 135 A. Masking to Assimilate. 137 B.... 2021    
Shaun Ossei-Owusu VELVET ROPE DISCRIMINATION 107 Virginia Law Review 683 (June, 2021) Public accommodations are private and public facilities that are held out to and used by the public. Public accommodations were significant battlegrounds for the Civil Rights Movement as protesters and litigators fought for equal access to swimming pools, movie theaters, and lunch counters. These sites were also important for the Women's Rights... 2021    
Njeri Mathis Rutledge WALKING THE TIGHTROPE: REFLECTIONS OF A BLACK FEMALE LAW PROFESSOR 43 Campbell Law Review 233 (2021) In a sobering moment, I realized that my success (and that of many people of color) stems from our ability to normalize daily racism--Njeri Rutledge (2020) As a Black female law professor, I often walk an invisible tightrope, carefully avoiding any misstep for fear of falling. The problem of racism makes that tightrope particularly difficult. There... 2021 African/Black American Yes
Melissa Tehee, Racheal Killgore, Sallie Mack, Devon S. Isaacs, Erica Ficklin WHEN JUSTICE DOES NOT WORK: A SOLUTION FOCUSED APPROACH TO VIOLENCE AGAINST NATIVE WOMEN IN INDIAN COUNTRY 36 Wisconsin Journal of Law, Gender & Society 33 (Spring, 2021) INTRODUCTION. 34 I. VIOLENCE AGAINST NATIVE WOMEN. 35 II. JURISDICTIONAL PROBLEMS. 36 A. Criminal Jurisdiction in Indian Country. 36 i. Federal Policy. 36 ii. Policing, Investigations, and Evidence Collection. 38 iii. High Rates of Federal Declination. 40 iv. Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls, and Two Spirit (MMIWG2). 42 B. Civil... 2021 American Indian/Alaskan Native Yes
Shannon Cumberbatch WHEN YOUR IDENTITY IS INHERENTLY "UNPROFESSIONAL": NAVIGATING RULES OF PROFESSIONAL APPEARANCE ROOTED IN CISHETERONORMATIVE WHITENESS AS BLACK WOMEN AND GENDER NON-CONFORMING PROFESSIONALS 34 Journal of Civil Rights & Economic Development 81 (Summer, 2021) Several years ago, I attended my first large-scale career fair as a recruiter where I screened a mass of aspiring lawyers for staff attorney positions at my legal organization. During our brief break from marathon interviewing, my white colleagues shut down their tables to enjoy their downtime and as I prepared to do the same, I looked up to find a... 2021 African/Black American Yes
Kim Forde-Mazrui WHY THE EQUAL RIGHTS AMENDMENT WOULD ENDANGER WOMEN'S EQUALITY: LESSONS FROM COLORBLIND CONSTITUTIONALISM 16 Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy 1 (Spring, 2021) The purpose of the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to those who drafted it and those who worked for nearly a century to see it ratified, is women's equality. The ERA may be on the cusp of ratification depending on congressional action and potential litigation. Its supporters continue to believe the ERA would advance women's equality. Their belief,... 2021   Yes
Kit Johnson WOMEN OF COLOR IN IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT 21 Nevada Law Journal 997 (Spring, 2021) Immigration enforcement agencies are among the most racially diverse in federal law enforcement. More than half of all women holding law enforcement positions within immigration agencies are minorities, though the overall number of female agents is relatively small. This Essay focuses on women of color in immigration enforcement. It begins with a... 2021   Yes
Michele Goodwin WOMEN ON THE FRONTLINES 106 Cornell Law Review 851 (May, 2021) This Article takes aim at the troubling and persistent disempowerment and invisibility of women generally, and particularly marginalized women of color even one hundred years after the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment. It observes how the persistence of sexism, toxically combined with racism, impedes full political, economic, and social... 2021   Yes
Shannon N. Morgan WORKING TWICE AS HARD FOR LESS THAN HALF AS MUCH: A SOCIOLEGAL CRITIQUE OF THE GENDERED JUSTIFICATIONS PERPETUATING UNEQUAL PAY IN SPORTS 45 Columbia Journal of Law & the Arts 121 (Fall, 2021) The difference is the total amount of revenue. It's not a gender issue. It's a revenue issue. This was Mark Cuban's response when called out about the pay gap between men's and women's professional basketball players by Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) player Skylar Diggins-Smith. So often when the question, Why do male athletes... 2021    
Benedetta Faedi Duramy #Metoo and the Pursuit of Women's International Human Rights 54 University of San Francisco Law Review 215 (2020) IN THE PAST YEAR, high profile cases and the ensuing #MeToo movement have raised much attention on issues surrounding gender discrimination, violence against women, and sexual harassment in the workplace. In the United States, allegations of sexual assault and harassment spawned the deposition or resignation of prominent figures in the...; Search Snippet: ...Francisco Law Review 2020 Article #Metoo and the Pursuit of Women's International Human Rights Benedetta Faedi Duramy [Fna1] Copyright © 2020 By... 2020   Yes
Linda C. McClain A "Woman's Best Right"--to a Husband or the Ballot?: Political and Household Governance in Anthony Trollope's Palliser Novels 100 Boston University Law Review 1861 (October, 2020) The year 2020 marks the one hundredth anniversary of the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. In 2018, the United Kingdom marked the one hundredth anniversary of some women securing the right to vote in parliamentary elections and the ninetieth anniversary of women securing the right to vote on the same terms as men....; Search Snippet: ...Law Review Boston University Law Review October, 2020 Article a Woman's Best Right--to a Husband or the Ballot?: Political And... 2020   Yes
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