Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Abolition of Familty (1)
- African-American lawyers (1)
- Alternative Childrearing Arrangements (1)
- Black dependency (1)
- Black poverty (1)
-
- Burdened individuality (1)
- Chicago-Kent Law Review (1)
- Civil Rights (1)
- Civil rights (1)
- Communitarianism (1)
- Constitutional Law (1)
- Derivative dependency (1)
- Enslavement to freedom (1)
- Fair Equality of Opportunity (1)
- Family (1)
- General Law (1)
- Human Nature (1)
- Human Rights Law (1)
- John Rawls (1)
- Jurisprudence (1)
- Justice (1)
- Justice as Fairness (1)
- Law and Society (1)
- Lena Olive Smith (1)
- Liberalism (1)
- Marxist Critique of Justice (1)
- Minnesota lawyers (1)
- NAACP (1)
- Original Position (1)
- Plato (1)
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Law and Gender
Rights Of Inequality: Rawlsian Justice, Equal Opportunity, And The Status Of The Family, Justin Schwartz
Rights Of Inequality: Rawlsian Justice, Equal Opportunity, And The Status Of The Family, Justin Schwartz
Justin Schwartz
Is the family subject to principles of justice? In A Theory of Justice, John Rawls includes the (monogamous) family along with the market and the government as among the "basic institutions of society" to which principles of justice apply. Justice, he famously insists, is primary in politics as truth is in science: the only excuse for tolerating injustice is that no lesser injustice is possible. The point of the present paper is that Rawls doesn't actually mean this. When it comes to the family, and in particular its impact on fair equal opportunity (the first part of the the Difference …
Lena Olive Smith: A Minnesota Civil Rights Pioneer, Ann Juergens
Lena Olive Smith: A Minnesota Civil Rights Pioneer, Ann Juergens
Faculty Scholarship
Lena Olive Smith and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) created a spirited partnership in the public interest during the 1920s and 1930s. Throughout their long collaboration, this woman lawyer, her clients, and the Minneapolis branch of a national grassroots organization faced similar challenges: to stay solvent, to end segregation and increase equality, and to live with dignity. This article is divided into four sections. The first three roughly correspond with stages in Smith’s life and work. Part II briefly chronicles Smith’s first thirty six years, 1885 to 1921, as a single African-American woman in the …
Taking Care, Katherine M. Franke
Taking Care, Katherine M. Franke
Faculty Scholarship
Care must be taken when human needs are expressed in the odd dialect of legal rights. This delicate act of translation – from private need to public obligation – demands acute sensitivity to the ways in which public responsibility inaugurates a new and complex encounter with a broad array of public preferences that deprive dependent subjects of primary stewardship over the ways in which their needs are met. Both Martha Fineman and Joan Williams have taken on the difficult project of making the ethical and political case for transforming dependency and care – from private or domestic need to public …
Kinship Care And The Price Of State Support For Children, Dorothy E. Roberts
Kinship Care And The Price Of State Support For Children, Dorothy E. Roberts
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Poverty, Welfare Reform, And The Meaning Of Disability, Jennifer Pokempner, Dorothy E. Roberts
Poverty, Welfare Reform, And The Meaning Of Disability, Jennifer Pokempner, Dorothy E. Roberts
All Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.