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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
Tribe's Judicious Feminism, Anita L. Allen
Tribe's Judicious Feminism, Anita L. Allen
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Law's Patriarchy, Lynne Henderson
Feminist Jurisprudence: Why Law Must Consider Women's Perspectives, Ann Juergens
Feminist Jurisprudence: Why Law Must Consider Women's Perspectives, Ann Juergens
Faculty Scholarship
A growing number of scholars are asking how the law would be different if it took women's points of view and experiences into account. Feminist Jurisprudence argues that we must look at the norms embedded in our legal system and rethink the law. It is about being inclusive of women, and of all people who differ from the norms of the law as it is today. The endeavor will necessarily shake up established relations between family, the workplace and the state. Lawyers, judges, and legislators should get ready for the changes.
The Power Of Language Beyond Words: Law As Invitation, Emily A. Hartigan
The Power Of Language Beyond Words: Law As Invitation, Emily A. Hartigan
Faculty Articles
Law is an invitation to fuller life, more than a mere instrument of force, coercion, and death, which is imprinted within each person and which animates the ideas of our constitutions and statutes. Our laws should seek to reflect and be unified with God’s Law, and the process towards that end requires disclosure and trust, which, in turn, requires clarity of one’s whole person, which is achieved through prayerfulness.
Much of academia and society only recognizes the evil present in our law and society; however, where there is evil or negativity, goodness and that which is positive must have preceded …
“Make The Ring In Your Mind” (Book Review), Emily A. Hartigan
“Make The Ring In Your Mind” (Book Review), Emily A. Hartigan
Faculty Articles
aking All the Difference, by Martha Minow, promised to render the multiple differences of race, gender, disability, and orientation, part of a whole discourse on difference. In this, the book is a success. Yet, the contradiction which Minow’s ideas play with her genre is bothersome. It is not that her way of writing is not valuable. Minow is remarkably lucid. But what she names at the outset—a relational approach, with a sensitivity to boundaries—she does not deliver. That conundrum, and why it seems to be—but is not—the unavoidable dilemma of the gifted female scholar in law today, is worth investigating.
Book Review. Law's Patriarchy, Lynne N. Henderson
Book Review. Law's Patriarchy, Lynne N. Henderson
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.