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2008

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Full-Text Articles in Law

Exploring Human Rights Implications Of Microfinance Initiatives, Rebecca Farrar Dec 2008

Exploring Human Rights Implications Of Microfinance Initiatives, Rebecca Farrar

Rebecca Farrar

Abstract for Article: Exploring the Human Rights Implications of Microfinance Initiatives by Rebecca Farrar

Microfinance and microcredit (“MFI”) programs have been advanced as a way to make the world a better place. These programs involve making small loans to people who would otherwise be unable to borrow money to facilitate them starting their own businesses: frequently, the programs focus on women borrowers in developing countries. Muhammad Yunus of the Grameen Bank says microfinance and microcredit programs can literally end world poverty.

This Article explores MFI from several perspectives, with particular emphasis on human rights issues. The emphasis of MFI programs …


White Women In Peril On Broadcast And Cable Television News, Prof. Leonard M. Baynes Dec 2008

White Women In Peril On Broadcast And Cable Television News, Prof. Leonard M. Baynes

Prof. Leonard M. Baynes

Abstract White Women in Peril on Broadcast and Cable Television News By Leonard M. Baynes It has been approximately forty years since the U.S. Supreme Court found the Fairness Doctrine constitutional and approximately twenty years since the Federal Communications Commission (the “FCC”) eliminated it. The Fairness Doctrine provided that the broadcasters were required to air important issues and to make sure that the other side of the issue was also covered. In 1969 in Red Lion, the U.S. States Supreme Court found the Fairness Doctrine constitutional under the First Amendment. In the late 1980s, the FCC decided that because of …


Families Redefined: Kinship Groups That Deserve Benefits, Jane E. Cross, Charlene Smith, Nan Palmer Nov 2008

Families Redefined: Kinship Groups That Deserve Benefits, Jane E. Cross, Charlene Smith, Nan Palmer

Jane E Cross

In Families Redefined: Kinship Groups that Deserve Benefits, the authors examine 1) the nature of kinship families, 2) the benefits accorded to married couples, 3) kinship families that lack protection and benefits, 4) the impact of denying kinship protection and benefits, 5) the use of contract law in kinship relationship and 6) using legislation to benefit kinship relationships.

This exploration of expanding family law protections to kinship groups addresses a series of interrelated topics. The first two sections of the article explore the characteristics and creation of kinship families in different societies. The third section addresses the legal benefits provided …


The Trouble With Putting All Of Your Eggs In One Basket: Using A Property Rights Model To Resolve Disputes Over Cryopreserved Embryos, Bridget M. Fuselier Nov 2008

The Trouble With Putting All Of Your Eggs In One Basket: Using A Property Rights Model To Resolve Disputes Over Cryopreserved Embryos, Bridget M. Fuselier

Bridget M Fuselier

“The Trouble With Putting All of Your Eggs in One Basket:

Using a Property Rights Model to Resolve Disputes Over Cryopreserved Embryos”

Bridget M. Fuselier

ABSTRACT

This article covers a very current and relevant topic in today’s legal environment. Previous articles have merely discussed competing models or coverage of the disputes in the case law. My article embarks upon a comprehensive look at the specific problem presented and then goes on to offer a specific model with proposed legislation to address these disputes in a fundamentally more efficient manner.

As evidenced by current efforts in a number of states, the …


People As Crops, Evelyn L. Wilson Nov 2008

People As Crops, Evelyn L. Wilson

Evelyn L. Wilson

In 1807, Congress passed a law prohibiting the importation of slaves. The South began to feel the effect of labor shortages and prices escalated. To meet this demand, farmers in the upper south states, especially Virginia, began the systematic breeding of slaves for sale to the southwest. Through the use of statements from Virginia statesmen and from some of Virginia’s former slaves, my paper discusses slave breeding, first as a consequence of slavery, as an added benefit to the labor obtained from the slave.

My father was born in Virginia, as was his father, as was his father, as was …


Do You Want To Be An Attorney Or A Mother? Arguing For A Feminist Solution To The Problem Of Double Binds In Employment And Family Responsibilities Discrimination, Heather Bennett Stanford Oct 2008

Do You Want To Be An Attorney Or A Mother? Arguing For A Feminist Solution To The Problem Of Double Binds In Employment And Family Responsibilities Discrimination, Heather Bennett Stanford

Heather P Bennett

This article is a research paper analyzing and proffering solutions to family responsibilities discrimination in the workplace. The article centers around a case filed in the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania. This case was filed by a female partner at the law firm Dickie, McCamey & Chilcote claiming discrimination based on family responsibilities. I chose this topic because I feel that it is an increasingly important and emerging area of employment discrimination law. This article introduces the background of the case and analyzes possible outcomes in light of caselaw involving employment discrimination in various contexts. …


From Hillary Clinton To Lady Macbeth: Or, Historicizing Gender, Law, And Power Through Shakespeare's Scottish Play, Carla Spivack Oct 2008

From Hillary Clinton To Lady Macbeth: Or, Historicizing Gender, Law, And Power Through Shakespeare's Scottish Play, Carla Spivack

William & Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice

Female rule was anomalous in the sixteenth century, therefore, Elizabeth I developed a complex set of symbols, rooted in claims traditionally made by male rulers, to legitimate her claim to rule. Nonetheless, her reign was anxiety-provoking, and this article argues that the years after her death saw a backlash against female power. Part of this backlash consisted of the reworking of the symbols Elizabeth had used. This article examines this process of revision in Shakespeare's play Macbeth and, later, in the responses of King James I to claims of demonic possession.

This article draws together three historical moments - Queen …


An Inconvenient Truth: Recognizing Andrea Yates Was A Victim Of Spousal Abuse: She Killed Her Children To Save Her Life, Shelby A.D. Moore Oct 2008

An Inconvenient Truth: Recognizing Andrea Yates Was A Victim Of Spousal Abuse: She Killed Her Children To Save Her Life, Shelby A.D. Moore

Shelby A.D. Moore

The definition of domestic violence is broad and includes physical as well as psychological and sexual abuse. However, the legal system gives considerably less attention to these latter forms of abuse. One reason for the relative neglect in the area is the assumption that physical abuse causes more harm than do psychological and sexual abuse. In reality these forms of abuse may have a far greater impact on their victims. Apart from physical abuse, greater attention must be given to those who suffer on-going psychological and sexual abuse at the hand of a spouse or intimate partner. We must consider …


No Cherries Grow On Our Trees: A Brief By The Take Action Project, Janet Mosher Sep 2008

No Cherries Grow On Our Trees: A Brief By The Take Action Project, Janet Mosher

Janet Mosher

A Public Policy Initiative to Address Women’s Poverty and Violence Against Women.


The Global Advancement Of Women: Barriers And Best Practices - Foreword, Paula A. Monopoli Sep 2008

The Global Advancement Of Women: Barriers And Best Practices - Foreword, Paula A. Monopoli

Paula A Monopoli

No abstract provided.


In A Different Voice: Lessons From Ledbetter, Paula A. Monopoli Sep 2008

In A Different Voice: Lessons From Ledbetter, Paula A. Monopoli

Paula A Monopoli

Women in academia—among some of the best educated women in America—suffer from the same salary inequities as other women in society. The American Association of University Professors (AAUP) has found that women faculty “earn lower salaries on average even when they hold the same rank as men.” Thus, the recent United States Supreme Court decision on pay equity, Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, holds a number of important lessons for women in academia. This article explores the intersection of these findings with the Court’s opinion in Ledbetter. The article examines the revealing rhetorical choices in the majority opinion, …


Women And The "New" Corporate Governance, Lisa M. Fairfax, Paula A. Monopoli Sep 2008

Women And The "New" Corporate Governance, Lisa M. Fairfax, Paula A. Monopoli

Paula A Monopoli

No abstract provided.


Passions We Like...And Those We Don't: Anti-Gay Hate Crime Laws And The Discursive Construction Of Sex, Gender, And The Body, Yvonne Zylan Sep 2008

Passions We Like...And Those We Don't: Anti-Gay Hate Crime Laws And The Discursive Construction Of Sex, Gender, And The Body, Yvonne Zylan

Yvonne Zylan

This article examines an oft noted, but largely unexplored, aspect of law’s functioning: its ability to constitute social reality. Specifically, I investigate the ways in which law helps define and delimit sexuality as a set of practices, experiences, and identifications. I do so by analyzing the discursive dimensions of anti-gay hate crime laws, demonstrating that such laws produce discrete discursive objects (doctrine and argument) within a specific set of institutional practices (the juridical field), and that these objects and practices in turn legitimate certain limiting narratives, instantiating them as social knowledge and as the ground of sexed and gendered performances. …


The Search For June Cleaver: International Marriage Brokerages And Mail-Order Brides, Itta C. Englander Sep 2008

The Search For June Cleaver: International Marriage Brokerages And Mail-Order Brides, Itta C. Englander

Itta C. Englander

This paper chronicles a journey through the modern mail-order bride industry. It examines the mail-order bride industry from its early roots in the Western Hemisphere to its current permutations. It discusses the risks that mail-order brides face and explores possible solutions offered through domestic and international instrumentalities.


Clitoridectomy And The Economics Of Islamic Marriage & Divorce Law, Ryan M. Riegg Sep 2008

Clitoridectomy And The Economics Of Islamic Marriage & Divorce Law, Ryan M. Riegg

Ryan M. Riegg

This article examines the legal and economic incentives created by the Islamic Marriage and Divorce System (“IMDS”) to develop an empirical model regarding the relative prevalence and severity of clitoridectomy practices in different Muslim societies and considers how those practices may be eliminated from an economic perspective.
Part I of the article establishes the economic link between the IMDS and clitoridectomy and compares the IMDS and the American Marriage & Divorce System (“AMDS”) in terms of their relative efficiency. Part II operationalizes and refines the basic theory outlined in Part I by creating a falsifiable model regarding the relative prevalence …


Left Hand, Third Finger: The Wearing Of Wedding (Or Other) Rings As A Form Of Assertive Conduct Under The Hearsay Rule, Peter Nicolas Sep 2008

Left Hand, Third Finger: The Wearing Of Wedding (Or Other) Rings As A Form Of Assertive Conduct Under The Hearsay Rule, Peter Nicolas

Peter Nicolas

In this manuscript, I examine the social phenomena of making use of what I call “ring evidence” to determine an individual’s marital status or sexual orientation. More specifically, I note the common practice of identifying people as married based on the presence of a ring on the ring finger of the left hand, as gay and in a committed relationship based on the presence of a ring on the ring finger of the right hand, and as single based on the absence of a ring.

Next, I identify two problems with making use of ring evidence to draw conclusions about …


Interstate Intercourse: How Modern Assisted Reproductive Technologies Challenge The Traditional Realm Of Conflicts Of Law, Sonia B. Green Sep 2008

Interstate Intercourse: How Modern Assisted Reproductive Technologies Challenge The Traditional Realm Of Conflicts Of Law, Sonia B. Green

Sonia Bychkov Green

New technologies have always posed challenges to established legal norms. Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART) in particular pose legal and ethical challenges to the law, and create never before seen legal problems. Although the ABA House of Representatives recently approved the Model Act Governing Assisted Reproductive Technology, differences in laws and rules will continue to exist. The legal issued involved are wide-ranging, including: liability issues arising from the failure of ART technology, parentage issues, disposition of embryos, and many others. As ART becomes more widely used, it is also used more in an interstate and international context. Thus, when a dispute …


Prenatal Drug Exposure: The Impetus For Overreaction By The Legal Community Or A Serious Problem Needing A Serious Solution, Janet W. Steverson Sep 2008

Prenatal Drug Exposure: The Impetus For Overreaction By The Legal Community Or A Serious Problem Needing A Serious Solution, Janet W. Steverson

Janet W. Steverson

In 1994 this author argued for the adoption of a legislative scheme that addressed the problems of children exposed prenatally to drugs and alcohol. Under that scheme fetal abuse became a crime. However, the sentence for the crime was probation with drug treatment and no-pregnancy conditions, rather than incarceration. Although no state has enacted the proposed legislative scheme in total, a number of states have enacted bits and pieces of the scheme. No state has, however, made fetal abuse a crime.

In addition to the legislation that has been enacted since 1994, a number of other changes have occurred that …


Domestic Violence, The Rucker Decision Interpretation Of 42 U.S.C. 1437d (1) (6), Sexual Harassment In Public Housing, And Municipal Violations Of The Eighth Amendment: Making Women Homeless And Keeping Them Homeless, Shirley D. Howell Sep 2008

Domestic Violence, The Rucker Decision Interpretation Of 42 U.S.C. 1437d (1) (6), Sexual Harassment In Public Housing, And Municipal Violations Of The Eighth Amendment: Making Women Homeless And Keeping Them Homeless, Shirley D. Howell

Shirley D. Howell

I spent this past summer researching explanations for the rapidly increasing phenomenon of female homelessness in America. While personal deficiencies such as alcoholism, mental illness and previous incarceration account for some female homelessness, I concluded that domestic violence, a flawed interpretation of 42 U.S.C. 1437d(1)(6), sexual harassment in public housing, and municipal violations of the Eighth Amendment are pervasive, but less frequently recognized, causes of female homelessness.

This article examines the great poverty that has befallen so many women in America and its causes. Section I discusses homelessness statistically. Section II examines domestic violence, flawed judicial interpretations, and sexual harassment …


Gender, Masculinities And Immigrant Workers: Using Gendered Experiences In The Las Vegas Residential Construction Trades To Reframe Title Vii Analysis, Leticia M. Saucedo Sep 2008

Gender, Masculinities And Immigrant Workers: Using Gendered Experiences In The Las Vegas Residential Construction Trades To Reframe Title Vii Analysis, Leticia M. Saucedo

Leticia M. Saucedo

This Article explores the intersection of gender, immigration and masculinities in the context of the immigrant workplace in the United States. It does so by analyzing some of the findings from the Immigrant Construction Worker Study, a qualitative empirical study conducted in Las Vegas, Nevada of immigrant construction workers employed in the residential construction industry. Between 2006 and 2007 the author and her collaborator, sociologist Cristina Morales, interviewed over seventy-five (75) male and female construction workers in Las Vegas, with the purpose of understanding the demographic changes in the residential construction industry and their effects on workers. The study’s empirical …


The New Boys: Women With Disabilities And The Legal Profession, Carrie G. Basas Sep 2008

The New Boys: Women With Disabilities And The Legal Profession, Carrie G. Basas

Carrie G Basas

This essay fuses the fields of law, feminist theory, and cultural studies to examine the status of women attorneys with disabilities. It is the first study of its kind in the United States. The author conducted an empirical, qualitative, and ethnographic study of women attorneys with disabilities in the United States. Thirty-eight attorneys participated and their narratives form the basis for critical analysis of disability animus and discrimination in the legal profession. The results show an alarming trend toward disabled women attorneys self-accommodating in the workplace, rather than enforcing their employment rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act. Relying on …


Good Ole’ Boys Apply Only: How The Ncaa Discriminates Against Minorities & Women In Collegiate Coaching, Nathan Berkeley Aug 2008

Good Ole’ Boys Apply Only: How The Ncaa Discriminates Against Minorities & Women In Collegiate Coaching, Nathan Berkeley

Nathan Berkeley

This note discusses the early-2008 NCAA Rule mandating that every NCAA Division I football team interview at least one minority head coach candidate when a vacancy evolves. I explore the possible reasons for the racial inequities and the unique circumstances in trying to implement an affirmative action program for unique high level positions. I argue that the NCAA Rule, as it stands now, is ineffective because there is currently no enforcement mechanism and that the Rule should be expanded to include other sports and women.


Good Ole’ Boys Apply Only: How The Ncaa Discriminates Against Minorities & Women In Collegiate Coaching, Nathan Berkeley Aug 2008

Good Ole’ Boys Apply Only: How The Ncaa Discriminates Against Minorities & Women In Collegiate Coaching, Nathan Berkeley

Nathan Berkeley

This note discusses the early-2008 NCAA Rule mandating that every NCAA Division I football team interview at least one minority head coach candidate when a vacancy evolves. I explore the possible reasons for the racial inequities and the unique circumstances in trying to implement an affirmative action program for unique high level positions. I argue that the NCAA Rule, as it stands now, is ineffective because there is currently no enforcement mechanism and that the Rule should be expanded to include other sports and women.


Good Ole’ Boys Apply Only: How The Ncaa Discriminates Against Minorities & Women In Collegiate Coaching, Nathan Berkeley Aug 2008

Good Ole’ Boys Apply Only: How The Ncaa Discriminates Against Minorities & Women In Collegiate Coaching, Nathan Berkeley

Nathan Berkeley

This note discusses the early-2008 NCAA Rule mandating that every NCAA Division I football team interview at least one minority head coach candidate when a vacancy evolves. I explore the possible reasons for the racial inequities and the unique circumstances in trying to implement an affirmative action program for unique high level positions. I argue that the NCAA Rule, as it stands now, is ineffective because there is currently no enforcement mechanism and that the Rule should be expanded to include other sports and women.


Redefining Harm, Reimagining Remedies And Reclaiming Domestic Violence Law, Margaret Johnson Aug 2008

Redefining Harm, Reimagining Remedies And Reclaiming Domestic Violence Law, Margaret Johnson

Margaret E Johnson

Women subjected to domestic violence are disserved by the civil domestic violence laws that should effectively address and redress their harms. The Civil Protective Order [CPO] laws should remedy all domestic abuse and not solely physical violence or criminal acts. All forms of abuse, including psychological, emotional, economic and physical abuse, cause severe emotional distress, physical harm, isolation, sustained fear, intimidation, poverty, degradation, humiliation, and coerced loss of autonomy. Moreover, all abuse is interrelated, because, as researchers have demonstrated, most domestic violence is the fundamental operation of systemic oppression through the exertion of power and control. Given the effectiveness of …


Good Ole’ Boys Apply Only: How The Ncaa Discriminates Against Minorities & Women In Collegiate Coaching, Nathan Berkeley Aug 2008

Good Ole’ Boys Apply Only: How The Ncaa Discriminates Against Minorities & Women In Collegiate Coaching, Nathan Berkeley

Nathan Berkeley

This note discusses the early-2008 NCAA Rule mandating that every NCAA Division I football team interview at least one minority head coach candidate when a vacancy evolves. I explore the possible reasons for the racial inequities and the unique circumstances in trying to implement an affirmative action program for unique high level positions. I argue that the NCAA Rule, as it stands now, is ineffective because there is currently no enforcement mechanism and that the Rule should be expanded to include other sports and women.


Good Ole’ Boys Apply Only: How The Ncaa Discriminates Against Minorities & Women In Collegiate Coaching, Nathan Berkeley Aug 2008

Good Ole’ Boys Apply Only: How The Ncaa Discriminates Against Minorities & Women In Collegiate Coaching, Nathan Berkeley

Nathan Berkeley

This note discusses the early-2008 NCAA Rule mandating that every NCAA Division I football team interview at least one minority head coach candidate when a vacancy evolves. I explore the possible reasons for the racial inequities and the unique circumstances in trying to implement an affirmative action program for unique high level positions. I argue that the NCAA Rule, as it stands now, is ineffective because there is currently no enforcement mechanism and that the Rule should be expanded to include other sports and women.


It's Not Just Shopping, Urban Lofts, And The Lesbian Gay-By Boom: How Sexual Orientation Demographics Can Inform Family Courts, Todd Brower Aug 2008

It's Not Just Shopping, Urban Lofts, And The Lesbian Gay-By Boom: How Sexual Orientation Demographics Can Inform Family Courts, Todd Brower

todd brower

Courts today are deeply involved in matters involving lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered persons. Same-sex marriage, custody disputes, conflict with religious claims and other, more routine family law cases all bring sexual orientation minorities into the judicial system as parties, witnesses, lawyers, or jurors. Like sexuality, gender and gender roles have traditionally and significantly influenced these issues. Nevertheless, judges and the legal system often have little factual information about the lesbians and gay men who appear in their courtrooms, instead relying on stereotypes of gay persons. Such reliance fails to see the real people currently present in family courts and …


Social Cognition 'At Work:' Schema Theory And Lesbian And Gay Identity In Title Vii, Todd Brower Aug 2008

Social Cognition 'At Work:' Schema Theory And Lesbian And Gay Identity In Title Vii, Todd Brower

todd brower

Lesbians and gay men are frequent subjects for modern news, politics, and court opinions. From marriage for same-sex couples to Congressional hearings on the military’s “Don’t ask, don’t tell” regulation, decision-makers are setting policy based on their ideas about how gay people are and how they fit into society. But what are those perceptions and how do they interact with law? We ordinarily think of lesbians and gay men as predominantly childless, urban residents of cities like San Francisco, New York, Chicago, or Los Angeles or as inhabitants of the Northeastern or Pacific Coast states. However, data from the 2000 …


Crime And Moral Condemnation, John H. Bogart Aug 2008

Crime And Moral Condemnation, John H. Bogart

John H Bogart

“Crime and Moral Condemnation” considers the relationship between enforcement of criminal law and moral condemnation of conduct by examining the enforcement of California’s feticide statute over a 50 year period in Sacramento. The article focuses in particular on the trial of Dr. T. Wah Hing, one of only three persons prosecuted during the period, and for whom a full trial transcript exists. The article suggests that abortion was not the object of widespread moral condemnation for reasons in addition to the paucity of prosecution, and that enforcement of the feticide statute was more the result of action by the California …