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Articles 1 - 12 of 12

Full-Text Articles in Law

Reversals In The Federal Constitutional Amendment Process: Efficacy Of State Ratifications Of The Equal Rights Amendment, Lynn Andretta Fishel Oct 1973

Reversals In The Federal Constitutional Amendment Process: Efficacy Of State Ratifications Of The Equal Rights Amendment, Lynn Andretta Fishel

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Status Of Women Meeting Summary, Richard Swenson May 1973

Status Of Women Meeting Summary, Richard Swenson

ADVANCE Library Collection

No abstract provided.


Rip-Off Professionalism, Marilyn C. Zilli Apr 1973

Rip-Off Professionalism, Marilyn C. Zilli

IUSTITIA

In the February 1972 issue of PRO SE (National Law Women's Newsletter) an article entitled "Professional Rip-off" criticized the Women's Liberation Movement for producing what the authors call "grasping opportunists," "pleasant, reasonable, charming, and eternally submissive sell-out[s] " (page 4). They are referring to professional women and posit that because, in a capitalist society, professional status is a privilege enjoyed by few, the claim that all women will benefit from an improvement in the status of professional women could not be farther from the truth (page 4): "Instead of making women more 'equal,' the new female professionals make themselves more …


The Equal Rights Amendment: Constraint On Discretion In Family Law, Marylou Clark, Tricia Semmelhack, Sara Steinbock Apr 1973

The Equal Rights Amendment: Constraint On Discretion In Family Law, Marylou Clark, Tricia Semmelhack, Sara Steinbock

Buffalo Law Review

No abstract provided.


Equal Protection For Juveniles: The Present Status Of Sex-Based Discrimination In Juvenile Court Laws, Samuel M. Davis, Susan C. Chaires Apr 1973

Equal Protection For Juveniles: The Present Status Of Sex-Based Discrimination In Juvenile Court Laws, Samuel M. Davis, Susan C. Chaires

Scholarly Works

The authors of this Article are concerned with sex-based discrimination in juvenile court laws. They first analyze those state laws that are sexually discriminatory and then explore the possibility of attacking these laws under the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment. Finally, the potential impact of the Equal Rights Amendment upon these laws is discussed.


Packer & Ehrlich: New Directions In Legal Education, Richard C. Maxwell Mar 1973

Packer & Ehrlich: New Directions In Legal Education, Richard C. Maxwell

Michigan Law Review

A Review of New Directions in Legal Education by Herbert L. Packer and Thomas Ehrlich


Usu Status Of Women News, Volumen I, Issue 3 Jan 1973

Usu Status Of Women News, Volumen I, Issue 3

ADVANCE Library Collection

No abstract provided.


Usu Status Of Women News, Volume I, Issue 1 Jan 1973

Usu Status Of Women News, Volume I, Issue 1

ADVANCE Library Collection

No abstract provided.


Usu Status Of Women News, Volume I, Issue 2 Jan 1973

Usu Status Of Women News, Volume I, Issue 2

ADVANCE Library Collection

No abstract provided.


The Right Of A Married Woman To Use Her Birth-Given Surname For Voter Registration - Stuart V. Board Of Supervisors Of Elections Jan 1973

The Right Of A Married Woman To Use Her Birth-Given Surname For Voter Registration - Stuart V. Board Of Supervisors Of Elections

Maryland Law Review

No abstract provided.


A Married Woman's Surname: Is Custom Law?, Julia C. Lamber Jan 1973

A Married Woman's Surname: Is Custom Law?, Julia C. Lamber

Articles by Maurer Faculty

A general awakening of concern for the rights of women has occurred in recent years, and with it the particular problems of married women have been analyzed against a background of centuries of legal and social assumptions. With the impetus of employment discrimination legislation, the proposed equal rights amendment, and litigation raising sex discrimination issues, it is not surprising that many women are actively seeking to retain their pre-marriage names. This movement compels us to re-examine the custom that a woman must assume her husband's surname upon marriage. That such a phenomenon is custom and not law deserves our attention …


Overruling Roe V. Wade: An Analysis Of The Proposed Constitutional Amendments, Charles E. Rice Jan 1973

Overruling Roe V. Wade: An Analysis Of The Proposed Constitutional Amendments, Charles E. Rice

Journal Articles

It is not my purpose here to criticize the abortion decisions in detail. Professor Robert M. Byrn has exposed the many specific errors and evasions found in the majority opinions in those cases. As Professor Byrn demonstrates, the Supreme Court's opinions in Wade and Bolton are an intellectual shambles. I will not try to cover the same detailed ground that Professor Byrn did. Rather, after examining the medical evidence which establishes that the unborn child is a human being from the moment of conception, this article will evaluate the propriety of excluding this class of human beings from the protections …