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Full-Text Articles in Law

“The Grass That Gets Trampled When Elephants Fight”: Will The Codification Of The Crime Of Aggression Protect Women?, Beth Van Schaack Sep 2010

“The Grass That Gets Trampled When Elephants Fight”: Will The Codification Of The Crime Of Aggression Protect Women?, Beth Van Schaack

Beth Van Schaack

This article analyzes the outcome of the Kampala process with an eye toward the rarely-considered gender aspects of the crime of aggression, whether or not the provisions adopted represent an advancement for women, and how aspects of feminist theory might interpret the new regime. The Article concludes that any impact of the provisions will inevitably be limited by gaps and ambiguities in the definition of the crime and the jurisdictional regime, which is premised on state consent and exempts non-states parties altogether. At the same time, the insertion of the crime of aggression in the Rome Statute enables the prosecution …


The Parentless Child's Right To A Permanent Family, Joseph S. Jackson, Lauren G. Fasig Sep 2010

The Parentless Child's Right To A Permanent Family, Joseph S. Jackson, Lauren G. Fasig

Joseph S. Jackson

Abstract More than 420,000 children in the United States are in foster care, and more than 110,000 of them are waiting to be adopted. State adoption statutes typically seek to achieve adoption for these children as promptly as possible, but some limit the pool of potential adoptive parents in one way or another. In this Article, we argue that such restrictions violate the State’s constitutional duties to parentless children in its care. Specifically, we contend that children in State custody have a substantive liberty interest in a secure and stable family relationship, because such a relationship is essential in order …


White Male Heterosexist Norms In The Confirmation Process, Theresa M. Beiner Aug 2010

White Male Heterosexist Norms In The Confirmation Process, Theresa M. Beiner

Theresa M. Beiner

Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s confirmation hearing took a controversial turn when commentators picked up on a reference in the New York Times to a portion of a speech she gave in 2001. In that speech, then Judge Sotomayor opined that, “I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life.” That statement, along with her participation in the per curiam decision in Ricci v. DeStefano, caused a minor storm during her confirmation. More recently, former Harvard Dean and former …


Marriage As A Trade: Bridging The Private/Private Distinction, Martha M. Ertman Aug 2010

Marriage As A Trade: Bridging The Private/Private Distinction, Martha M. Ertman

Martha M. Ertman

No abstract provided.


Domestic Violence And Spyware: How And Why Spousal Abuse Through Spyware Lies Outside The Protection Of California Law And A Proposal For Reform., Terese Laubscher Aug 2010

Domestic Violence And Spyware: How And Why Spousal Abuse Through Spyware Lies Outside The Protection Of California Law And A Proposal For Reform., Terese Laubscher

Terese E Laubscher

No abstract provided.


"The Woman In The Street:" Reclaiming The Public Space From Sexual Harassment, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg Aug 2010

"The Woman In The Street:" Reclaiming The Public Space From Sexual Harassment, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg

Deborah Thompson Eisenberg

No abstract provided.


Women Health Issues And Women Consumers, Ranganath Ranganath Vg Vadapalli Vg. Jul 2010

Women Health Issues And Women Consumers, Ranganath Ranganath Vg Vadapalli Vg.

Dr. V.G.Ranganath

Women are the greatest asset of the society and the nation. Empowerment of Women in Health and Consumer aspects may lead to a better health status. It was only from the Sixth Five year Plan onwards that women secured a special role and space in the national plans and planning process primarily with thrusts on health, education and employment. The Seventh Five year Plan aimed at raising health consciousness among women.


Drawing Bisexuality Back Into The Picture: How Bisexuality Fits Into Lgbt Legal Strategy 10 Years After Bisexual Erasure, Heron Greenesmith Jul 2010

Drawing Bisexuality Back Into The Picture: How Bisexuality Fits Into Lgbt Legal Strategy 10 Years After Bisexual Erasure, Heron Greenesmith

Heron Greenesmith

In 2000, Kenji Yoshino published a paper exploring the social erasure of bisexuality. He introduces the paper by empirically proving that bisexuality was invisible through a quick survey of popular news sources that featured volumes more articles about homosexuality than bisexuality. Once he shows that bisexuality is invisible, he makes sure to distinguish between the incidental invisibility of bisexuality, perhaps because of the low number of bisexuals, and its deliberate erasure. Erasure is a deliberate act that involves the participation of people who seek to erase. Yoshino theorizes that monosexuals (heterosexuals and homosexuals) created an epistemic contract to erase bisexuality …


What Dignity Demands: The Challenges Of Creating Sexual Harassment Protections For Non-Workplace Settings, Camille Gear Rich May 2010

What Dignity Demands: The Challenges Of Creating Sexual Harassment Protections For Non-Workplace Settings, Camille Gear Rich

Camille Gear Rich

In the more than twenty years since the Supreme Court created Title VII’s sexual harassment protections, judges and feminist legal scholars have struggled to create a clear conceptual account of the harm sexual harassment inflicts. Many courts and scholars were content to justify sexual harassment law by arguing that it vindicates women’s interest in workplace equality; however, several feminist legal scholars revealed the inadequacy of this account by the late 1990s, suggesting instead that harassment should be understood as inflicting dignitary harm. The failure to reach consensus about sexual harassment law’s purpose appeared without significant consequence until courts began developing …


The New Uniform Probate Code's Surprising Gender Inequities, Kristine Knaplund Apr 2010

The New Uniform Probate Code's Surprising Gender Inequities, Kristine Knaplund

Kristine Knaplund

The new Uniform Probate Code provisions on assisted reproduction include the five critical elements needed to address the broad range of issues in current law and practice, and in general the provisions work well. But as the sections now stand, they pose a delicious irony regarding children conceived and born long after a parent’s death: they allow a woman, especially a married woman, to alter the property distribution of a man’s estate by having a postmortem conception child, but accord very few men the same power. After centuries of laws giving men complete control over their wives’ property, perhaps the …


The New Uniform Probate Code's Surprising Gender Inequities, Kristine Knaplund Apr 2010

The New Uniform Probate Code's Surprising Gender Inequities, Kristine Knaplund

Kristine Knaplund

The new Uniform Probate Code provisions on assisted reproduction include the five critical elements needed to address the broad range of issues in current law and practice, and in general the provisions work well. But as the sections now stand, they pose a delicious irony regarding children conceived and born long after a parent’s death: they allow a woman, especially a married woman, to alter the property distribution of a man’s estate by having a postmortem conception child, but accord very few men the same power. After centuries of laws giving men complete control over their wives’ property, perhaps the …


Exploring A New Paradigm For Women's Rights, Rebecca Zietlow Mar 2010

Exploring A New Paradigm For Women's Rights, Rebecca Zietlow

Rebecca E Zietlow

Nearly forty years after the Supreme Court recognized gender as a suspect class under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and almost half a century after the 1964 Civil Rights Act guaranteed women the right to work free of sex discrimination, women still find found gender equality to be an elusive goal. The persistent gender gap in wages and the continued prevalence of domestic violence are two indications that the predominant model of equality law, based in the Equal Protection Clause, is simply not adequate to address women’s inequality in our society.

The book GENDER EQUALITY: DIMENSIONS OF …


Crumbs From The Table: The Syrophoenician Woman And International Law, Mark Chinen Mar 2010

Crumbs From The Table: The Syrophoenician Woman And International Law, Mark Chinen

Mark A. Chinen

In this Article I consider a story from the New Testament for what it might say to international law. A woman of Syrophoenician origin, whose daughter is possessed by an evil spirit, asks Jesus for help. Jesus protests, “First let the children eat all they want, for it is not right to take the children’s bread and toss it to their dogs.” The woman replies, “Yes, Lord, but even the dogs under the table eat the children’s crumbs.” Jesus is impressed by this reply and tells the woman her daughter is well. The way in which the story unfolds is …


Currency Of Love: Customary International Law And The Battle For Same –Sex Marriage In The United States, Sonia B. Green Feb 2010

Currency Of Love: Customary International Law And The Battle For Same –Sex Marriage In The United States, Sonia B. Green

Sonia Bychkov Green

The battle for same-sex marriage is likely to be the civil rights issue of this decade. Developments all over the world over the last several years have caused celebration, public outcry and passionate debate. In the last year alone, the first Latin American same-sex wedding was performed, Sweden joined the nations who allow same-sex marriage, and the United States saw the “Proposition 8” debacle in California, and the new federal lawsuits that will inevitably propel the issues toward the Supreme Court. The legal debate in the United States has asked the crucial question: is there a legal right to marriage …


Saving Seaborn: Ownership Not Marriage As The Basis Of Family Taxation, Dennis Ventry Feb 2010

Saving Seaborn: Ownership Not Marriage As The Basis Of Family Taxation, Dennis Ventry

Dennis Ventry

Later this year, one of the most famous Supreme Court tax cases will celebrate its eightieth birthday. In Poe v. Seaborn, the Court reified two principles of the federal income tax: ownership determines tax liability and state law determines ownership. This article establishes that tax liability for families continues to follow ownership not marriage, despite the federal government’s position that the “ownership equals taxability” principle applies exclusively to heterosexual spouses. Verifying the broad application of this principle carries significant implications for all families. Under the aegis of Seaborn, it authorizes members of state-recognized relationships—marriages, domestic partnerships, civil unions—to file federal …


Shattering The Equal Pay Act's Glass Ceiling, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg Jan 2010

Shattering The Equal Pay Act's Glass Ceiling, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg

Deborah Thompson Eisenberg

This Article provides the first empirical and rhetorical analysis of all reported Equal Pay Act (EPA) federal appellate cases since the Act’s passage. This analysis shows that as women climb the occupational ladder, the manner in which many federal courts interpret the EPA imposes a wage glass ceiling, shutting out women in non-standardized jobs from its protection. This barrier is particularly troubling in light of data that shows that the gender wage gap increases for women as they achieve higher levels of professional status. The Article begins by examining data regarding the greater pay gap for women in upper-level jobs. …


U.S. Immigration Law: Where Antiquated Views On Gender And Sexual Orientation Go To Die, Marisa S. Cianciarulo Dec 2009

U.S. Immigration Law: Where Antiquated Views On Gender And Sexual Orientation Go To Die, Marisa S. Cianciarulo

Marisa S. Cianciarulo

This Essay examines the paradoxical approaches to gender and sexual orientation bias within the U.S. immigration system. On the one hand, the immigration system has managed to convey benefits to same-sex partners despite federal law prohibiting the recognition of same-sex unions for immigration purposes. Immigration law also provides benefits for victims of crimes disproportionately committed against women, such as human trafficking and domestic violence, although the systems in place for adjudicating these benefits are flawed. On the other hand, immigration law favors antiquated notions of gender roles that disadvantage U.S. citizen men and their children, and has failed to recognize …


Florence Kelley And The Battle Against Laissez-Faire Constitutionalism, Felice J. Batlan Dec 2009

Florence Kelley And The Battle Against Laissez-Faire Constitutionalism, Felice J. Batlan

Felice J Batlan

The usual story of the demise of laissez-faire constitutionalism in the 1930’s features heroes such as Louis Brandeis, Felix Frankfurter and the great male legal progressives of the day who rose up from academia, the bench, and the bar, to put an end to what historians label "legal orthodoxy." In this essay, I seek to demonstrate that Florence Kelley was a crucially important legal progressive who was at the front lines of drafting and defending new legislation that courts were striking down as violating the Fourteenth Amendment and State constitutions. Looking at who was drafting and lobbying for path breaking …


The Birth Of Legal Aid: Gender Ideologies, Women, And The Bar In New York City, 1863-1910, Felice J. Batlan Dec 2009

The Birth Of Legal Aid: Gender Ideologies, Women, And The Bar In New York City, 1863-1910, Felice J. Batlan

Felice J Batlan

This article provides a case study and an in-depth analysis of the WWPU. It then discusses how by the turn of the century, when the Society became the dominant provider of legal aid in New York City, women’s roles as legal providers and recipients of legal aid was even further expanded. By doing so, I demonstrate that gender was foundational to the development of legal aid and that women played crucial roles as lawyers, benefactors, and clients. Although this article focuses on New York, legal aid organizations in cities such as Chicago and Philadelphia also first arose to provide free …


Imbalanced Sex Ratio At Birth And Women’S Human Rights In China: A Rights Analysis And Comparative Implications, Jiayu Zhang Dec 2009

Imbalanced Sex Ratio At Birth And Women’S Human Rights In China: A Rights Analysis And Comparative Implications, Jiayu Zhang

Dr. Jiayu Zhang

Sex Ratio at Birth (SRB) is the ratio of the number of girls born to the number of boys. From the 1980s, the SRB in China has been below the normal level and has kept an overall decreasing trend till today. SRB and women’s status are closely related, it is evident that a declining SRB indicates worsening female advantages. However, most relevant studies have been male-centered and inadequate in analyzing the consequences of the abnormal SRB in China. Instead, this paper will focus on the causal relation between the skewed SRB and women’s human rights, so the existing and potential …


Punishing Pregnant Drug-Using Women: Defying Law, Medicine, And Common Sense, Jeanne M. Flavin Phd, Lynn M. Paltrow Jd Dec 2009

Punishing Pregnant Drug-Using Women: Defying Law, Medicine, And Common Sense, Jeanne M. Flavin Phd, Lynn M. Paltrow Jd

Jeanne M Flavin

The arrests, detentions, prosecutions, and other legal actions taken against drug-dependent pregnant women distract attention from significant social problems, such as our lack of universal health care, the dearth of policies to support pregnant and parenting women, the absence of social supports for children, and the overall failure of the drug war. The attempts to “protect the fetus” undertaken through the criminal justice system (as well as in family and drug courts) actually undermine maternal and fetal health and discourage efforts to identify and implement effective strategies for addressing the needs of pregnant drug users and their families. In this …


Addressing Domestic Violence Through The Law: A Guide To - The Protection Of Women From Domestic Violence Act, 2005, Saumya Uma Dec 2009

Addressing Domestic Violence Through The Law: A Guide To - The Protection Of Women From Domestic Violence Act, 2005, Saumya Uma

Dr. Saumya Uma

The book is essentially a guide to the use of Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act (PWDVA), 2005. Intended for the use of district lawyers, as well as other concerned members of the civil society, the book is in a question and answer format, containing an analysis of the provisions and impact of the law, as well as extracts of landmark judgments of the High Courts and the Supreme Court of India. It has been printed in both English and Hindi.


When The Veil And The Vote Collide: Enhancing Muslim Women’S Rights Through Electoral Reform, Amber R. Maltbie Dec 2009

When The Veil And The Vote Collide: Enhancing Muslim Women’S Rights Through Electoral Reform, Amber R. Maltbie

Amber R Maltbie

Voter identification laws serve a critical purpose in the consolidation of emerging democracies and post-conflict situations. By serving as a prophylactic curb against voter fraud when trust in the electoral process is low, voter identification laws strengthen the public’s perception of an election’s integrity and the legitimacy of the government elected. However, even when administered absent any discriminatory intent, these laws can have unintended consequences, especially for Muslim women who wear a veil that covers the face. For new democracies or post-conflict states with large or majority Muslim populations, voter turnout among women can be suppressed if the jurisdiction’s electoral …