Another post about Posner, this time making reference to a generally lubricous glass-based material containing an appreciable amount of an oxide of boron.

Check out “Judge Posner at the Federal Circuit: Patent on Sex Aid is Obvious” at Patently-O if you want to read about Posner’s take on the patentability of adapting easy-slide thermometer materials for use on sex toys. Here’s the abstract of what was formerly an enforceable patent:

A sexual aid comprising a cylindrical rod is disclosed. The rod has a length with a first end and a second end. A sphere is integrally formed in the first end of the rod. A loop-shaped handle or a second sphere may be provided on the second end of the rod. The rod, sphere or spheres and/or handle are fabricated of a generally lubricous glass-based material containing an appreciable amount of an oxide of boron. A plurality of spheres may be provided on the rod intermediate the first and second ends.

null

Insert pervy Graham factors joke (e.g. long felt but unmet need) here. Or just amuse yourself by contemplating who the PHOSITA is.

Cross-posted here.

–Ann Bartow

Share
Posted in Bloggenpheffer, Feminism and Technology, Legal Profession | Comments Off on Another post about Posner, this time making reference to a generally lubricous glass-based material containing an appreciable amount of an oxide of boron.

No Men’s Studies Required

A lawyer attempted to force the creation of a men’s studies department based on the existence of the women’s studies department.   Both judges who had the case before them denied the claims.    So women’s studies departments are safe, at least with regard to any threat posed by a potential “men’s studies” department taking their thunder, or funding, away.     However, the suit does raise the legitimate question of when the remaining “women’s studies” departments will recognize that a non-sex specific identifier would be a more effective title for an academic discipline.     Gender Studies is both more accurate in describing the field of feminist and other inquiries on gender (related to men, women, and the many other sexes) and more inclusive.  

NY Times coverage is  here.

-Darren Rosenblum

Share
Posted in Feminists in Academia | 1 Comment

Did you know there was an all-female football league in which players wear lingerie instead of pads?

Somehow up until now I was unaware of the Lingerie Football League. How long until universities decides to field same? The NCAA has already approved “sand volleyball” as an emerging sport, and women players are required to wear bikinis, unlike the men. And, see also (“Beach volleyball was a TV hit at the 2008 Summer Olympics, although it remains to be seen how a game that banked on sex appeal will translate to the collegiate sports world.”)

null

–Ann Bartow

Share
Posted in Academia, Feminism and Sports | 2 Comments

Differently Abled?: Court Identifies Circuit Split Over Who is Similarly Situated to a Pregnancy Discrimination Act Plaintiff

The recent opinion of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois  in Woodard v. Rest Haven Christian Services, 2009 703270 (N.D. Ill. 2009), acknowledged but did not resolve an interesting circuit split on the following issue: When a plaintiff brings an employment discrimination claim under the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, whom should the court deem similarly situated to the plaintiff? According to some courts, the only appropriate comparators are those who became disabled off the job. According to other courts, the similarly-situated analysis should be done by looking to any other employee who has an equivalent ability (or inability) to perform the job, including those who became temporarily disabled due to a workplace injury while on the job.

Continue reading

Share
Posted in Courts and the Judiciary, Feminism and the Workplace | Comments Off on Differently Abled?: Court Identifies Circuit Split Over Who is Similarly Situated to a Pregnancy Discrimination Act Plaintiff

I Shouldn’t Be Surprised

I get the strangest ads as my 40th birthday approaches.

-Bridget Crawford

Share
Posted in Feminism and Culture | Comments Off on I Shouldn’t Be Surprised

Gender and the Supreme Court “Vacancy”

Last week, Dahlia Lithwick wrote an intriguing article in Slate magazine regarding the frequently heard argument that President Obama’s first nominee to the Court should be a woman.   Lithwick quotes Justices Ginsberg and O’Connor lamenting the  dearth of women on the Court and also examines the arguments concerning whether women are different  jurists than men.

I find this debate fascinating, and I do believe – and the Court has ruled  – that diversity matters in American discourse.   However, as we value and encourage diversity, we must avoid essentialism.   So, for me, the question is not whether a woman should be appointed to the Court, but rather what type of woman she will be.

This question is critical.   All women do not think the same way, share the same opinions, nor agree on what it means to be a woman in America in the early 21st century.     It would be folly to treat women like a deck of cards – “pick a woman, any woman” – and hope that the desired result –  that being concern for women  – will be obtained based on the presence of two X chromosomes.   When politically disenfranchised groups are placed in prominent positions, this danger is ever present.    Clarence Thomas and Thurgood Marshall are both African American males, but their judicial philosophies are entirely opposite.     Sarah Palin and Hillary Clinton share little in common politically despite sharing a race and gender.   Thus, in the desire to see a woman on the Court we must be clear on what  is desired.

I believe what most people are saying when they say “we need a female justice” is that there should be someone on the Court who cares about women’s rights and can effectively articulate those positions.   But must this person necessarily be a woman?   Don’t get me wrong – there are certain things that only women can know.   (I believe that is why both Justices Ginsberg and O’Connor dissented in the Nguyen case when the majority declared that birth automatically bonds a mother and child.   Those women knew better.)   However, there are men out there that can understand these concepts.   Justice Blackmun – a man – was responsible for Roe and defended that decision, as well as women’s reproductive rights in other ways during his tenure on the Court.   Given the choice between a Justice Blackmun and a justice who cares little about the myriad problems women face but who happens to be a woman –  most women’s rights advocates would probably  take the guy.

In sum, I beleive, as always, that judges care about the law over all else.   However, it is also true that in any human group, people bring their past and personal philopophies to bear.     Let those be the standards to judge the candidates rather than gender.

–Nareissa L. Smith

Cross-posted from the   Constitutional Law Prof Blog

Share
Posted in Feminism and Law, Feminism and Politics, The Underrepresentation of Women | Comments Off on Gender and the Supreme Court “Vacancy”

Great for veterinarians but not for vegetarians.

Business cards made from bacon.

null

Via Froomkin.

Share
Posted in Baconpheffer | 4 Comments

Drawings About Women and the Law

24Don’t miss this deliciously pretty [if a bit Second Wave] series of drawings and musings about women and the law from today’s NY Times by April Kalman.  

-Darren Rosenblum

Share
Posted in Legal Profession | Comments Off on Drawings About Women and the Law

Is Tenure a Trap for Women?

IS TENURE A TRAP FOR WOMEN?

The Chronicle of Higher Education’s Daily Report

Not if the tenure system is adapted to suit the modern realities of professors’ lives.

By MARY ANN MASON

The fear of failure influences many female academics to delay starting a family until after they have earned tenure. That same fear influences other women to avoid the tenure track entirely and decide that they must choose family over career. Shirley M. Tilghman, the first woman to be president of Princeton University, famously argued that the tenure system should be dropped because it is “no friend to women.” She pointed out that it makes huge demands at a time when women are already stressed out with young families.

Even members of Congress are focusing on the problem. Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson, a Texas Democrat and senior member of the House Science Committee, has introduced legislation that would, among other reforms, stop the university tenure clock for scientists with newborn responsibilities. “Federal policy makers must be more proactive in stopping the leaky pipeline that results in women departing at every major transition point while pursuing careers in engineering, physics, technology, and related fields,” she said.

Would women be better off without a 19th-century career model that was conceived when only men were professors and their stay-at-home wives cared for the children?

Certainly the timing of tenure is terrible for women. Today, the average age at which women can expect to receive a Ph.D. is 34. That puts the five to seven years of racing the tenure clock squarely at the end of the normal reproductive cycle. Those are the “make or break” years for female academics, in terms of both career and childbearing, not to mention the demands of raising young children. Difficult choices must be made.

How would the academic world work without a tenure system? Unfortunately, we don’t have to fantasize to envision that alternate world. It is with us now, growing rapidly, and supported largely on the backs on women with children. A 30-year trend has relentlessly reduced the centrality of tenure in higher education. Full timers who were either tenured or on the tenure track made up 55 percent of the faculty in 1970, 1975, and 1980, but then declined to 41 percent in 2003. According to the National Center for Education Statistics, tenured and tenure-track academics composed only 31 percent of all faculty members in 2007, while 49 percent worked part time and 12 percent were non-tenure-track full timers.

Tenure is fast fading away in favor of a leaner, meaner business model that makes use of low-paid instructors who work part time, often without benefits. It is happening at both public and private institutions and at all levels of higher education, from research universities to community colleges. It is not a fluke that that 30-year trend coincides with the incredible rise of women in doctoral education. Women now receive about half of all Ph.D’s awarded in the United States, providing half of the available labor force. Because of caregiving responsibilities or geographical restraints imposed by being part of dual-career couples, many women are often willing to serve in a part-time role, providing the labor for this new business model.

Our research at the Berkeley Law Center on Health, Economic & Family Security shows that women with children across all disciplines are twice as likely as men with children to work in part-time or non-tenure-track positions. Many women (and some men) take part-time jobs because they don’t think they can handle a demanding full-time, tenure-track post during the early years of raising children. Some expect to eventually switch to the tenure track. They may not be so concerned about the low pay and marginalization of being an adjunct if they believe it is a temporary phase, which will end once the children are older. Regrettably, they rarely get the opportunity to seek tenure.

Leslie, a Ph.D. I interviewed for my book,  Mothers on the Fast Track,  has spent her career teaching at the same university as a lecturer. “The majority of part timers are women and … their job is very insecure and very uncomfortable,” she said. “One part timer just retired because after 20 years of teaching, the schedule came out and her name just was not there. No one talked to her or discussed anything. … It is very clear to many of us part-time people in the academic system that it is not a good route to a tenure-track position.”

So you have a system in which a large portion of the labor pool cannot handle the front-end demands of the tenure system, as it exists, but ultimately feel abused by a dead-end, part-time career path. There must be a compromise position, and, in fact, some universities are thinking innovatively about the problem.

Most universities provide some relief in the form of policies to stop the tenure clock for childbirth. Although that is a welcome measure, our research has found that it is not used unless it is an entitlement (rather than something you receive by special request); it is available to fathers, and used by them as well; and it is supported and enforced by the campus culture. The same cultural support and enforcement is necessary to promote paid childbirth leaves and relief from teaching. In our 2003 study of faculty members at the University of California system, 51 percent of eligible mothers said they did not use the teaching-relief policy “because it might have hurt my chances for tenure or promotion.”

Bolder policies include a part-time tenure track or a tenure track that allows people to switch from part-time to full-time status, depending on their family circumstances. Again, in our survey of California faculty members, we found wide support, among men and women of all ages, for allowing faculty members to shift at times to part-time status. For younger faculty members, it was child-care needs that prompted such great interest, and for older faculty members it was elder-care responsibilities (for a spouse or parent) and their own physical disabilities. A few universities, including the University of California, now have formal policies endorsing some form of a part-time tenure track. Yet despite the great demand for such policies, they remain relatively uncommon in academe.

Other important reforms would include:

  • a formal policy that invited part-time faculty members to apply for full-time, tenure-track positions as they open;
  • a policy that encouraged hiring committees to discount CV gaps when considering applicants who are parents.

A university without tenure would not allow the creative, challenging environment in which discovery and scholarship flourish. It would be, instead, a corporation staffed by part-time and contingent employees who could be hired or fired at the will and whim of the full-time corporate administrators. That would be a loss for students, for faculty members, and for the future of knowledge and innovation.

The tenure system, for all its faults, must be promoted, not extinguished. But it must be made more flexible to level the playing field and suit the modern realities of professors’ lives.

Mary Ann Mason is a professor and co-director of the Berkeley Law Center on Health, Economic & Family Security and the author (with her daughter, Eve Ekman), of  Mothers on the Fast Track. She writes regularly on work and family issues for our Balancing Act column, and invites readers to send in questions or personal concerns about those issues. She will answer your questions in a future column. E-mail your comments to  careers@chronicle.com  or to  mamason@law.berkeley.edu. To read previous Balancing Act columns, seehttp://chronicle.com/jobs/news/archives/columns/balancing_act.

–Leigh Goodmark (with thanks to the Clinicians with Not Enough To Do blog)

Share
Posted in Academia | Comments Off on Is Tenure a Trap for Women?

Robson on “A Servant of One’s Own: The Continuing Class Struggle in Feminist Legal Theories and Practices”

Ruthann Robson (CUNY) has posted to SSRN her essay,  “A Servant of One’s Own: The Continuing Class Struggle in Feminist Legal Theories and Practices.”  Here is the abstract:

This essay considers the role of feminist legal theories in confronting the continuing issue of domestic service. Part one discusses MRS. WOOLF AND THE SERVANTS: AN INTIMATE HISTORY OF DOMESTIC LIFE IN BLOOMSBURY by Alison Light, including both the particularities and larger social aspects of Virginia Woolf’s employment of domestic workers. Part two examines Long Island Care at Home v. Coke, in which the United States Supreme Court upheld a regulation that exempted certain employees in “domestic service” from minimum and overtime wage laws even if they were hired by a company rather than a household. Part three considers the trial and proceedings in US v. Sabhani, in which the United States prosecuted and a jury convicted a woman and a man for “forced labor” and “document servitude” of two women from Indonesia. In the last section, the essay compares the situations of Virginia Woolf and her servants, Long Island Care at Home, Ltd. and its servants, and Varsha Sabhnani and her servants. The essay argues that any relationship categorized as “servant” and “master,” even when the “master” is a “mistress,” and even when the master/servant dichotomy is viewed as a relatively equal contractual relationship rather than one based on status, is deeply problematical. The essay further argues that this “servant problem” needs much more feminist attention.

The full essay is here.

-Bridget Crawford

Share
Posted in Feminist Legal Scholarship, Women and Economics | Comments Off on Robson on “A Servant of One’s Own: The Continuing Class Struggle in Feminist Legal Theories and Practices”

Miss Subways in New York

In the midst of what may be the last gasps of beauty pageants, the NY Times ran this article on “Miss Subways” in New York, which was the first integrated beauty contest.     The winner’s photo would appear all over the subway, with the first black winner in 1948 and the first Asian in 1949.   The photos are delicious, but my favorite is Enid Berkowitz, who had no shame in saying she was gunning for a B.A. but would settle for an M.R.S.       What would Linda Hirshman say?!

-Darren Rosenblum

Share
Posted in Feminism and Culture | Comments Off on Miss Subways in New York

Obama picked a fantasic Secretary of State

From the WaPo:

House Republicans today tried to pummel Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton with questions about the administration’s decision to release Justice Department memos permitting tough interrogation techniques of detainees, but she gave no ground.

At one point during Clinton’s hearing before the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.) cited former vice president Richard Cheney, who has claimed that the administration is suppressing documents that show a more positive picture of the effectiveness of techniques and also that the Bush administration tried to correct problems as they arose.

“It won’t surprise you that I don’t consider him a particularly reliable source of information,” Clinton shot back.

Go Hillary.

–Ann Bartow

Share
Posted in Feminism and Politics | Comments Off on Obama picked a fantasic Secretary of State

Murray on “Marriage Rights and Parental Rights: Parents, the State, and Proposition 8”

Feminist Law Prof Melissa Murray (Berkeley) has posted to SSRN her article, “Marriage Rights and Parental Rights: Parents, the State, and Proposition 8.”  Here is the abstract:

On November 4, 2008, 52% of Californians voted for Proposition 8, a ballot initiative amending the state constitution to eliminate same-sex marriage rights. In the weeks and months since the election, there have been many explanations for Proposition 8’s success, including the impact of Mormon money and minority homophobia. What has been neglected in the discussion is some analysis of the way in which the Yes on 8 campaign reframed the debate over same-sex marriage from an anti-discrimination/equal rights discourse to one that emphasized the threat of state imposition on individual rights, including parental rights. Revealing the way in which the campaign focused on the threat of state interference with parental rights offers a more nuanced account of Proposition 8’s success. It also says much about the legal and social construction of the family and our understanding of the relationship between parents and the state in ensuring the well-being of children. By tapping into embedded cultural and legal tropes about the family and about the relationship between parents and the state, the campaign also can be understood as a manifestation of family law’s characterizations of the family and the state.

The full article is available here.

-Bridget Crawford

Share
Posted in Feminism and Families, Feminist Legal Scholarship | Comments Off on Murray on “Marriage Rights and Parental Rights: Parents, the State, and Proposition 8”

The impact of the underrepresentation of women in the media and SCOTUS, illustrated.

Historiann observes:

Nina Totenberg’s report on All Things Considered last night on  the”strip search”case heard yesterday at the Supreme Court is the only news report I can find that notes that lone woman Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was on her own at one point in the hearing:

  • “At this point in the argument, a gender difference reared its head.   Justice Breyer suggested that  it’s no big deal when kids strip–after all, they do it for gym class all the time.   Savana Redding didn’t reveal her body beyond her underclothes, said Breyer.   Justice Ginsburg, the court’s only female justice, bristled.   Her eyes flashing with anger, she noted that there’s no dispute that Savannah was required to shake out her bra and the crotch of her panties.   Ginsburg seemed to all but shout,”boys may like to preen in the locker room but girls, particularly teenaged girls, do not.”

The Washington Post report by Robert Barnes says that”Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg seemed at times on the edge of exasperation with her all-male colleagues,”but provided no further detail.   McClatchy’s article by Michael Doyle says that”Ginsburg conveyed dismay at the search’s intrusiveness,”but doesn’t report further on her views.   The New York  Times report, written by Adam Liptak,  omits mentioning that Ginsburg was even in the room yesterday…

Ruth Bader Ginsburg gets it.   And as Dahlia Lithwick noted:

When constitutional historians sit down someday to compile the definitive Supreme Court Concordance of Not Getting It, the entry directly next to Lilly Ledbetter (“Court fails utterly to understand realities of gender pay discrimination”) will be Savana Redding (“Court compares strip searches of 13-year-old girls to American Pie-style locker-room hijinks”). After today’s argument, it’s plain the court will overturn a 9th Circuit Court of Appeals opinion finding a school’s decision to strip-search a 13-year-old girl unconstitutional. That the school in question was looking for a prescription pill with the mind-altering force of a pair of Advil:and couldn’t be bothered to call the child’s mother first:hardly matters.

The SCOTUS transcript is available here.   At page 45 Justice Ginsburg says:

Mr. Wolf, one thing should be clarified. I don’t think there’s any dispute what was done in the case of both of these girls. It wasn’t just that they were stripped to their underwear. They were asked to shake their bra out, to — to shake, stretch the top of their pants and shake that out. There’s no dispute, factual dispute about that, is there?

And then on page 46 continues:

There was no dispute that they asked her to shake her pants and her bra. Nobody said that they touched — the school officials didn’t touch her, that’s a given. But they did ask her to shake out her underwear.

Warmest thanks to Nina Totenberg, Dahlia Lithwick and especially Ruth Bader Ginsburg for representing all of us, on the Court and in the media.

–Ann Bartow

Share
Posted in Feminism and Law, Justice?, Sexism in the Media, The Underrepresentation of Women | 3 Comments

Student Health Insurance Available for up to One Year after Graduation

The ABA Law Student Division circulated this information today for graduating students who need health insurance:  

Numerous graduating third year law students who are either currently unemployed or on deferred employment have inquired about the availability of health insurance from the ABA Law Student Division. For many of these law student graduates, their current health insurance will expire this summer and without employer health insurance, they will be uninsured for an indefinite period of time.  Because health insurance coverage is important, we encourage you to pass along this message to your third year graduating law students.

The ABA Law Student Division health insurance plan with  UnitedHealthcare Student Resources  (UHCSR) offers a health insurance coverage  extension  for up to one year from the student’s graduation date  PROVIDED  the student is currently carrying this plan  AND  there is no break (lapse) in coverage between the date of graduation and the first day of this one-year extension.

Graduating law students who are not currently carrying this health insurance coverage with the ABA Law Student Division UHCSR plan may still qualify for the graduate extension by purchasing the last quarter of the health plan  before  graduating.  Enrollment in the plan prior to graduation is an ABSOLUTE requirement of the carrier. Students may view the health plan benefits here.

For more information regarding this benefit and a pro-rated premium amount that will provide coverage for 12 months from the date of graduation, students may call UHCSR at 1-800-505-5450.

Two simple steps –

1. This program is offered to ABA Law Student Division members only.  If not currently enrolled in the ABA – students may join by calling 800.285.2221 or visiting here.    

2. If not currently enrolled in  UnitedHealthcare Student Resources  â€“ students should sign up now while still a student and  before graduation  for the last quarter (90 days) of the current plan, in order to be eligible for the graduate extension. Eligibility requires being a law student – not a graduate; being enrolled in an ABA-approved law school and being a member of the ABA.   Students enrolling (or already enrolled) must request the graduation extension which will  expire one year from the student’s graduation date. Please keep in mind that there can be no break in coverage from the original plan and the extension. UHCSR will calculate a pro-rated premium for that graduation extension coverage. For a copy of the plan benefits, please visit here.

For more information, contact the ABA Law Student Division at  ABALSD@staff.abanet.org

-Bridget Crawford

Share
Posted in Law Schools, Legal Profession | 1 Comment

“New Media Delegation Seeks Innovation, But Not Diversity”

Important post by Jen Nedeau, here’s the first paragraph:

Yet another diversity FAIL in the world of technology.  While the  State Department brings it’s first “New Media Technology” delegation to Iraq with the noble purpose of exploring “new opportunities to support Iraqi government and non-government stakeholders in Iraq’s emerging new media industry” – it forgot one big thing: WOMEN.

Share
Posted in Feminism and Politics, Sexism in the Media, The Underrepresentation of Women | Comments Off on “New Media Delegation Seeks Innovation, But Not Diversity”

Posner Really is a Pragmatist.

The evidence.

Share
Posted in Academia | 1 Comment

“For years, I could think of nothing more humiliating than being a woman with a $75,000 education who got caught reading a book cleverly titled “The Throbbing Pirate”, for which the cover art is just a close up of an improbably bulging codpiece.”

Post title extracted from this post, which robustly praises romance novels. Here’s another excerpt:

Then when I was sixteen, after a few years of not reading any romance novels, I picked up Judith McNaught’s Something Wonderful on a complete whim.

It was a revelation.

For the first time, I found myself fully engaged by a romance novel. I couldn’t put it down. The heroine was adorable, and any urge to shake her stemmed from fond exasperation, not a desire to dislocate her brainstem. The hero was yet another aristocratic asshole, but he was also vulnerable and sweet. And the conflict was fun and compelling, despite the eye-rolling misunderstandings. (I say this with love, but almost all of McNaught’s conflicts go something like this: Hero: “You’re a whore and out to use me! See this circumstantial evidence here? Proof you’re a whore. Also, my parents never loved me. Wah.” Heroine: “I’m not a whore, I’m just a painful combination of beautiful, spunky and naïve. Also, I have horrible, manipulative relatives, and I’m willfully blind to this fact because non-clueless heroines won’t come into fashion until about ten years after this book is published. Wah.”)

I read that book in one glorious sleep-deprived rush, then ran back to the store and grabbed all the other McNaught novels I could find. Once I’d ploughed my way through all of them, I looked for even more romances I liked. I was no longer daunted by the crap I encountered along the way because I had learned something valuable: there was indeed such a thing as a romance novel worth reading.

For a scholarly take on romance novels, see “Reading the Romance: Women, Patriarchy and Popular Literature,” by Janice A. Radway (reviewed here).

–Ann Bartow

Share
Posted in Feminism and Culture, Feminism and the Arts | Comments Off on “For years, I could think of nothing more humiliating than being a woman with a $75,000 education who got caught reading a book cleverly titled “The Throbbing Pirate”, for which the cover art is just a close up of an improbably bulging codpiece.”

“There is a difference between critique and seeking to shut my ass up because I’m not saying it the way you would, singing it the way you want to hear it sung or approaching a subject from the angle you want it to be approached from.”

Sentence pulled from this excellent post by Sharkfu at Feministing.

Share
Posted in Acts of Violence, Feminism and Technology, The Underrepresentation of Women | 1 Comment

Program on “Transgender People and The Law”

A special shout-out goes to the Lambda students at the William H. Bowen School of Law at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.  They close out an academic year of good programming with their final event, a discussion on   “Transgender People and The Law,” Monday, April 27, 2009, from  12:00pm to 1:30pm. This event is free and open to the public.  Here’s the description:

Co-sponsored by  Bowen Lambda and the  ACLU of Arkansas Student Chapter , this program seeks to promote an understanding of what it means to be transgender and of the challenges transgender people face. Program includes the following speakers and topics:

Olivia Powers
‘ personal story as an individual who transitioned from male to female; a survey by  Mike Lauro of how courts treat transgender litigants;  Prof. Terri Beiner’s analysis of transgender sexual harassment and employment discrimination; and perspectives on mental health by  Margaret Morgan. We will suggest ways to make laws and policies more fair and how society can be more inclusive of transgender people.

If attending, please RSVP  to  mvlauro@ualr.edu.  (They need a count for lunch.)

You also can show your support for the students and the ACLU of Arkansas by joining their Facebook groups (here and here, respectively).

-Bridget Crawford


Share
Posted in LGBT Rights, Upcoming Lectures | 2 Comments

“Where Have All of the Female Rappers Gone?”

See this post here at the new(ish) Hip Hop Law blog! Another recent post is titled: “Candy Girls Are Not Made of Sugar and Spice and Everything Nice.”

Share
Posted in Academia, Feminism and Culture, Feminism and Law, Feminism and the Arts | 1 Comment

More about US v. Stevens, the Third Circuit decision that the federal law criminalizing the depiction of animal cruelty is an unconstitutional infringement on the First Amendment.

Previous post by Ruthann Robson here.

The Oregon Animal Law blog noted that the ability to federalize the prosecution of animal cruelty cases has been effectively terminated with this ruling if it is followed by the other circuits. It probably will be if the 3d Circuit ruling is affirmed by the Supreme Court. From the linked post:

Defendant sold pit bull related videos and merchandise. Law enforcement officers arranged to buy three videotapes from defendant. The first two tapes showed circa 1960s and 70s footage of organized dog fights that occurred in the United States and involved pit bulls, as well as footage of more recent dog fights, also involving pit bulls, from Japan. The third video showed footage of hunting excursions in which pit bulls were used to catch wild boar, as well as footage of pit bulls being trained to perform the function of catching and subduing hogs or boars. The district court denied defendant’s motion to dismiss the indictment based on his assertion that § 48 abridged his first amendment right to freedom of speech. In vacating defendant’s conviction, the court held that § 48 regulated protected speech and it was unwilling to create a new category of unprotected speech. The court also held that, subjecting § 48 to strict scrutiny, § 48 could not withstand that heightened level of scrutiny because it served no compelling government interest, was not narrowly tailored to achieve such an interest, and did not provide the least restrictive means to achieve that interest.

The court struck down § 48 as constitutionally infirm and vacated defendant’s conviction. Petition for certiorari filed at, 12/15/2008. The Third Circuit found that there were already laws in all states against animal cruelty. The intent of Congress was to supplant those laws (which are hard to enforce without witnesses to the cruelty) with a law to prohibit the depiction of the cruelty. The analogy in the briefing is made to laws prohibiting the depiction of child   pornography. The Third Circuit rejected the analogy finding that animals are not like children when it comes to the first amendment analysis. Part of that difference is found in the fact that animals do not perceive the injury of the depiction of the cruel act (as would a child) and thus the injury is not in the depiction but in the cruel act (which is already illegal under state statutes). See, United States v. Stevens, 533 F.3d at 230.

The statute at issue, 18 U.S.C.S. § 48, was passed because while all individual states criminalize cruelty to animals, none has a statute that prohibits the sale of depictions of cruelty to animals, so distributors of “crush porn” in which animals were tortured   could not be effectively prosecuted.   The faces of   women inflicting torture on aninals in “crush porn” may not be shown, and neither   the location of filming nor the date of the activity may be ascertainable by scrutinizing the porn itself. Defendants arrested for violating a state cruelty to animals statute in connection with the production and/or sale of   “crush porn” could successfully assert as a defense that the state could not prove its jurisdiction over the place where the acts occurred or that the actions depicted took place within the time specified in the state’s statute of limitations.     Only if the people involved in the production   of the crush porn were caught in the act could state anti-cruelty laws be   invoked, and then only for the torture itself, not for the production and sale of same.

The text of the statute at issue is as follows:

§  48. Depiction of animal cruelty

(a) Creation, Sale, or Possession.: Whoever knowingly creates, sells, or possesses a depiction of animal cruelty with the intention of placing that depiction in interstate or foreign commerce for commercial gain, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 5 years, or both.
(b) Exception.: Subsection (a) does not apply to any depiction that has serious religious, political, scientific, educational, journalistic, historical, or artistic value.
(c) Definitions.: In this section:

(1) the term”depiction of animal cruelty”means any visual or auditory depiction, including any photograph, motion-picture film, video recording, electronic image, or sound recording of conduct in which a living animal is intentionally maimed, mutilated, tortured, wounded, or killed, if such conduct is illegal under Federal law or the law of the State in which the creation, sale, or possession takes place, regardless of whether the maiming, mutilation, torture, wounding, or killing took place in the State; and
(2) the term”State”means each of the several States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and any other commonwealth, territory, or possession of the United States.

–Ann Bartow
Share
Posted in Acts of Violence, Feminism and Animal Law, Feminism and Law | Comments Off on More about US v. Stevens, the Third Circuit decision that the federal law criminalizing the depiction of animal cruelty is an unconstitutional infringement on the First Amendment.

Fashionable Feminism

Threadbared is a   blog by two academic women with teaching and research interests in the politics of fashion and beauty, incluing representations of race and class.   Via.

Share
Posted in Academia, Feminism and Culture, Feminist Blogs Of Interest | Comments Off on Fashionable Feminism

“Guns, threats, space, and gender”

Compelling post by Historiann, which begins:

Inside Higher Ed featured a story yesterday  about universities that allow students to bring their guns to campus if they have concealed-carry permits, and states like Texas and Missouri where oh-so-brave state legistlators are working hard to make sure that people can  walk around packing heat on their state university campuses.

It’s hard for me to be objective about this issue, after losing law prof colleagues to a law school shooting. And when I was an undergrad there was a multiple shooting murder at my University. For personal reasons this is still a vivid memory as well. And I witnessed how finding a bullet in her faculty mailbox affected one of my colleagues a number of years ago.

Historiann’s post notes that a few  weeks ago, a masked man opened the door to a campus lecture hall where her colleague was giving a mid-term “and started screaming semi-coherently.   He then slammed the door to the lecture hall and moved on to scream at the class next door.”   Turns out this was just a “prank.” Historiann observed: “One thing I was grateful for was that despite the  Masked Intruder’s juvenile and thoughtless behavior, I am glad  that he wasn’t shot dead by a  Concealed-Carry Avenger who brought a gun to his exam.”

–Ann Bartow

Share
Posted in Academia, Acts of Violence, Feminism and Law, Feminists in Academia | Comments Off on “Guns, threats, space, and gender”

Default Judgment in “Doe v. Fortuny”

From here:

On February 20, 2008, an anonymous plaintiff sued Jason Fortuny in Illinois federal court for copyright infringement, invasion of privacy through the publication of private facts, and intrusion, after Mr. Fortuny allegedly posted his photograph and personal information on the Internet.

Mr. Fortuny, a now-famous Internet “troll” who was featured in an August 2008 New York Times article, performed a notorious “Craigslist Experiment” in 2006, in which he posted a fake ad on Craigslist pretending to be a woman seeking a”str8 brutal dom muscular male”for sex. According to the New York Times, over one-hundred men responded, providing photographs and contact information. Mr. Fortuny allegedly posted this material to his blog, RFJason, and Encyclopedia Dramatica (described by the New York Times as “an online compendium of troll humor and troll lore”). Mr. Fortuny disputes posting the photographs and contact information to Encyclopaedia Dramatica.

One of the men who responded to Mr. Fortuny’s prank filed the Illinois lawsuit, claiming that Fortuny violated his copyrights and invaded his privacy by posting his photograph and personal information. The complaint [sought] $75,000 in damages and request[ed] an injunction requiring Mr. Fortuny to remove the photograph and contact information from his website.

On April 9th the court entered a default judgment against Fortuny for $74,252.56 in damages, attorneys fees, and costs.

ETA: One account of Fortuny’s postings here.

–Ann Bartow

Share
Posted in Feminism and Law | Comments Off on Default Judgment in “Doe v. Fortuny”

Crush Porn Before SCOTUS

The United States Supreme Court has granted certiorari in US v. Stevens, 533 F.3d 218 (3rd Cir. 2008).   The usual report is that the case is about videotapes of dog-fighting and whether their sale can be criminalized under the First Amendment.   Indeed, Stevens, the defendant, was convicted under 18 U.S.C. § 48, which provides that

“Whoever knowingly creates, sells, or possesses a depiction of animal cruelty with the intention of placing that depiction in interstate or foreign commerce for commercial gain, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 5 years, or both.”

But as the Third Circuit noted, Congress was not necessarily primarily interested in the protection of animals:

Resort here to some legislative history is instructive, not as a device to help us construe or interpret the statute, but rather to demonstrate the statute’s breadth as written compared to what may originally have been intended. The legislative history for § 48 indicates that the primary conduct that Congress sought to address through its passage was the creation, sale, or possession of”crush videos.”A rush video is a depiction of”women inflicting . . . torture [on animals] with their bare feet or while wearing high heeled shoes. In some video depictions, the woman’s voice can be heard talking to the animals in a kind of dominatrix patter. The cries and squeals of the animals, obviously in great pain, can also be heard in the videos.”H.R. REP. NO. 106-397, at 2 (1999). Testimony presented at a hearing on the Bill, and referenced in the House Committee Report, indicates that”these depictions often appeal to persons with a very specific sexual fetish who find them sexually arousing or otherwise exciting.”Id. at 2–3.

In short, this is a case about”pornography”or”sexual expression”(choose your label) as well as about the abuse of animals.

–Ruthann Robson

Share
Posted in Academia, Feminism and Law, Guest Blogger | Tagged , | Comments Off on Crush Porn Before SCOTUS

Law Professor Annette Gordon-Reed (NYLS) Wins Pulitzer

null

From the NYT list of winners:

HISTORY:”The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family,”by Annette Gordon-Reed: A painstaking exploration of a sprawling multi-generation slave family that casts provocative new light on the relationship between Sally Hemings and her master, Thomas Jefferson.”

Review of ‘The Hemingses of Monticello’ | Profile of Annette Gordon-Reed

null

From her NYLS webpage.

Share
Posted in Academia, Feminist Legal History, Race and Racism, Recommended Books | Comments Off on Law Professor Annette Gordon-Reed (NYLS) Wins Pulitzer

The NY Post is reporting that the father of a child actor who appeared in Slumdog Millionaire is trying to sell her.

Story here. The NY Daily news says same. It is based on an account from News of the World. The story was also reported by the London Times.

I don’t really have anything useful to say about this. I’m not sure if blogging this is the right thing to do, and I may take this post down after I’ve reflected a bit more. I’m very grateful for the life and advantages I have.

–Ann Bartow

UPDATE: The BBC News reports that the father denies the story.

Share
Posted in Sisters In Other Nations, Women and Economics | Comments Off on The NY Post is reporting that the father of a child actor who appeared in Slumdog Millionaire is trying to sell her.

“Harman-Pelosi Feud Was Maybe About Dirty Intelligence Matters, Not Hairdos Or Whatever”

Snarky post by that title at Wonkette.

Share
Posted in Feminism and Politics, Sexism in the Media | Comments Off on “Harman-Pelosi Feud Was Maybe About Dirty Intelligence Matters, Not Hairdos Or Whatever”

“The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency: The Many Facets of Raced and Gendered Tele-Identity (Or, Nemos, Nomos and Narrative)”

New post by Feminist Law Prof Lolita Buchner Inniss, here.

Share
Posted in Feminism and Culture, Feminism and the Arts, Feminist Blogs Of Interest, Race and Racism | Comments Off on “The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency: The Many Facets of Raced and Gendered Tele-Identity (Or, Nemos, Nomos and Narrative)”

Cyberstalking Conviction in Montana

A 28-year-old University of Montana student plead guilty to cyberstalking for sending threatening e-mails to his former girlfriend. Jeffrey D. Grob pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Missoula on Thursday. He faces possible penalties of 5 years in prison, a $250,000 fine and 3 years supervised release

Prosecutors say Grob sent the threatening e-mails to his former girlfriend from October through December 2007. The e-mails included death threats and some included pictures of dead women. An Oct. 15, 2007 e-mail said: “I hope you die!!” One on Nov. 24 read: “I’m going to slit your throat. If you ever come back to Montana again I am going to slit your throat.” A Dec. 02 missive said “You should do this!!!!” and included a picture that appears to be someone who has committed suicide by jumping off of a building. Still another featured a picture of a dismembered woman and said: “This will be you.”

Via. See also.

Excerpt from the DoJ account documenting Grob’s explicit threats at this link and after the fold…

Continue reading

Share
Posted in Acts of Violence, Feminism and Law | Comments Off on Cyberstalking Conviction in Montana

Dating Advice For Teenaged Boys

Here. Wonder if the local high schools would distribute the linked post. Probably not, but they should.

Share
Posted in Feminism and Culture, Feminist Blogs Of Interest | Comments Off on Dating Advice For Teenaged Boys

The Colbert Coalition’s Anti-Gay Marriage Ad

“There’s a giant gay storm gathering, and before long the winds will be blowing each other.”

The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
The Colbert Coalition’s Anti-Gay Marriage Ad
colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor NASA Name Contest
Share
Posted in Feminism and Culture, It's satire, in case that requires pointing out, LGBT Rights | Comments Off on The Colbert Coalition’s Anti-Gay Marriage Ad

Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick: A Tribute From Marrakech

eveI returned yesterday from 10 days in Morocco to learn with great sadness of Eve Sedgwick’s passing.     In an odd way, it was fitting that I was in North Africa during her last days – for there are few places in the world in which one can experience the celebration of homosociality more than one can in the Maghreb.

Eve gave us this term: homosociality.   Challenging us to think beyond a homo-hetero binary as the primary frame for organizing the expression of desire, in Between Men: English Literature and Male Homosocial Desire (1985), Eve sought to show us how the intimate bonds between men should be understood as at once about erotic between-mendesires but not essentially so, as in the conventional homosexual sense, or to use her way of framing it, in the genital sense.   Rather, she envisioned a continuum between homosociality and homosexuality, whereby men’s desires for one another served as the social force, or glue, that holds patriarchal societies together.   To this end, she suggested that we might better understand the desires between men as a continuum between “men loving men” (homosexuality) and “men promoting the interests of men” (homosociality).   Provocatively (as she always was) she thus suggested a similarity between a self-identified gay male couple (men loving men) on the one hand and Jesse Helms and Ronald Reagan working to develop “family policy” (men promoting men’s interests) on the other.   In this sense, Sedgwick urged us to see the relationship between sexual (gay/lesbian) and power (gender) -based politics.

As we walked through the streets of Marrakech and the village of Imlil over the last week, I couldn’t help but be reminded of   Sedgwick’s work, and when I described the culture to my family with whom I was traveling as deeply homosocial, I mentioned Between Men as the source of an analysis that urges us to resist seeing gayness in the Chelsea/Castro sense when we witness two men in public holding hands, stroking one another’s faces, or walking arm in arm.   These sights are very common in Morocco, as they were when I was in Cairo last spring.     But we’d be wrong to “read” Moroccan culture as latently homosexual.   What Eve gave us was a more complex way to think the world – to see how same-sex intimacy in these sorts of settings cannot be reduced to sexual desire, yet the desire that structures these ways of relating should not be denied either… Click here for rest of post

Katherine Franke, cross-posted from Columbia Law School Gender and Sexuality Law Blog

Share
Posted in Academia | Comments Off on Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick: A Tribute From Marrakech

Why buying shoes online is increasingly popular.

Many sites allow free returns, and also this.

Share
Posted in Feminism and Culture | Comments Off on Why buying shoes online is increasingly popular.

Free Speech and the Internet: Public Radio Interviews of Gary LeBeau, David Rosen, Danielle Citron and Brian Leiter

Listen here.

Share
Posted in Feminism and Culture, Feminism and Law, Feminism and Technology | Comments Off on Free Speech and the Internet: Public Radio Interviews of Gary LeBeau, David Rosen, Danielle Citron and Brian Leiter

“American Violet”

null
From the movie website:

Based on true events during the 2000 election, AMERICAN VIOLET tells the astonishing story of Dee Roberts (critically hailed newcomer Nicole Beharie), a 24 year-old African American single mother of four young girls living in a small Texas town who is barely able to make ends meet.

While police drag Dee from work in handcuffs, dumping her in the squalor of the women’s county prison, the powerful local district attorney (Academy Award ® nominee Michael O’Keefe) leads an extensive drug bust, sweeping her housing project with military precision. Dee soon discovers she has been charged as a drug dealer.

Even though Dee has no prior drug record and no drugs were found on her in the raid, she is offered a hellish choice: plead guilty and go home as a convicted felon or remain in prison, jeopardizing her custody and risking a long prison sentence.

She chooses to fight the district attorney and the unyielding ccustody and risking a long prison sentence.

She chooses to fight the district attorney and the unyielding criminal justice system, risking everything in a battle that forever changes her life and the Texas justice system. AMERICAN VIOLET also stars Academy Award ® nominee Alfre Woodard, Emmy Award ® winner Charles S. Dutton, Tim Blake Nelson, Will Patton and Xzibit.

NOTE: American Violet was initially inspired by an NPR story by Wade Goodwyn. [See also   A Drug War’s Collateral Damage]

That was six years ago. Much of the film was informed by thousands of pages of information provided on a range of stories by the ACLU among others. A variety of media reports and legal documents, including sworn testimony, depositions and affidavits, all of which can be found on the public record also helped us find authentic patterns and voices for our storytelling. Finally, taped interviews with community members who had experienced circumstances similar to those outlined in our work proved useful.

However, American Violet is not a documentary. It is a narrative feature film that is, as it says, based on true events. Some scenes and characters have been fictionalized for dramatic effect and have no relationship to the historical record. Names have been changed to protect the innocent and also to protect this film.

The movie has a blog here. Below is the trailer:

–Ann Bartow

Share
Posted in Feminism and Law, Feminism and Politics, Race and Racism | Comments Off on “American Violet”

“Tormented by Cyberstalker, Ropes Partner Drafts New Legislation on Online Libel”

From Law.com:

Ropes & Gray partner Joan Lukey is no stranger to litigation battles.

As one of The American Lawyer’s Star Laterals of 2008 — she joined Ropes in June after 34 years at crosstown Boston rival Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr — Lukey has tried more than 70 cases and become a renowned First Amendment lawyer.

But now she is trying to silence a cyberstalker, Leslie Sachs. He began targeting her after she obtained a court order against him on behalf of star client and noted crime novelist Patricia Cornwell in 2007.

After threats on Lukey’s life and others at her firm, the 59-year-old litigator is now drafting federal legislation to go after those who make libelous statements on the Internet.

“All of this relates to the fact that the Internet leads people to function anonymously, which in turn means there’s no accountability because you can’t find them,” Lukey says. “That’s what this is about. We just want to stop Leslie Sachs.”

Lukey’s current problems with Sachs stem from an earlier dispute Cornwell had with him nearly a decade ago.

Sachs, whom Lukey says graduated cum laude from Harvard and has obtained a Ph.D. in religious studies from Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., claimed that Cornwell lifted portions of her 2000 novel “The Last Precinct” from his own self-published book, “The Virginia Ghost Murders.”

Cornwell obtained a permanent injunction and consent decree from a federal court in Richmond, Va. — where the author lived at the time — preventing Sachs from claiming she plagiarized him. But six years later, after repeated personal attacks by Sachs against her on the Web, Cornwell retained Lukey for a libel suit against him.

But they couldn’t find him. Sachs had moved to Europe years earlier and Lukey says he had no intention of participating in court proceedings. So Lukey says she obtained permission from a federal judge — “I think it was only the second time in U.S. history” — to serve Sachs by e-mail.

It didn’t matter. Lukey says Sachs replied by sending an e-mail to U.S. district court Judge Norman Moon telling him to stick any order he entered where the sun doesn’t shine. Moon eventually found Sachs to be in contempt, held that 45 of his statements against Cornwell were libelous, and awarded the author nearly $36,000 in damages.

But Sachs wouldn’t stop with his rhetoric, so Lukey contacted search engines directly. She tried to get them to take down sites where Sachs was posting libelous statements, which aren’t protected by the First Amendment. With the exception of Yahoo, she says all complied.

When Sachs started adopting aliases to avoid the restrictions, Lukey says she became more aggressive in going after him. Lukey says she even went to Belgium, where Sachs claimed to be living, to obtain a court order against him. Soon Lukey started noticing that Sachs was now going after her as well.

“I became his co-equal object of venom along with Patricia,” Lukey says. “And he was clever enough to start posting things in a forum that gets linked to all the legal blogs.”

Some of Sachs’ more outrageous allegations: that Lukey is a CIA agent who has conspired with Cornwell to have him murdered; that Lukey is a rabid anti-Semite who enjoys persecuting Sachs, who is Jewish; that Lukey bribed a Boston Globe reporter to smear Sachs’ name in a story about Cornwell; that Lukey is a close confidant of former President George W. Bush (in fact, Lukey was John Kerry’s finance director); and that Lukey left Wilmer because Cornwell was being investigated by U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald.

Lukey says that the latter accusation so infuriated her and perplexed Fitzgerald, that he took the unusual step of publicly stating that Lukey and her client were not under investigation.

After Lukey switched firms last summer, she says the vitriol behind Sachs’ attacks against her increased. But it was the e-mail threatening her and other Ropes employees with bodily harm that finally put Lukey over the top.

“In a long e-mail diatribe to [Ropes managing partner John Montgomery] about what an evil person I am, [Sachs] ended it by fantasizing about my death,” Lukey says. “He wrote something to the effect of, ‘You should be worried about someone coming in and blowing her brains out and taking down some of your staff at the same time.’ That’s when people started getting upset.”

Lukey says the statement also highlighted a flaw in federal law. Since Sachs didn’t say that he was going to do it — only that he wished someone would — the statement didn’t rise to the level of a criminal threat.

A forensic psychiatrist hired by the firm determined that Sachs was talking about himself, says Lukey, so extra security measures were put in place at the firm’s Boston headquarters to make sure that no uninvited visitors made their way upstairs. But those measures don’t extend to the public garage where Lukey parks.

“At night when I leave, I sometimes can’t avoid thinking, when I’m the only one down there, about the risks,” she says. “He could always follow me. It’s a nightmare.”

So Lukey says she’s been working on draft legislation to amend two 1996 laws — the Communications Decency Act and Interstate Stalking Act — to close loopholes in civil and criminal law on what individuals can say online.

“On the civil side, we’re offering to search engines, Internet service providers and Web browsers immunity from liability if someone else posts defamatory content,” Lukey says. “But if there’s a court order at the outset of a libel case, they would be required to provide whatever identifying information they can about the poster, particularly the metadata necessary to track the IP address of the computer.”

As the law now stands in the United States, Lukey says that nobody can track an IP address legally unless there’s a criminal complaint pending. Lukey’s bill would allow law enforcement agencies to conduct such a search if a judge finds reasonable cause to believe there are libelous or defamatory postings without a criminal complaint.

Lukey says the ISPs and search engines would then have an obligation to enforce any court order to pull down or block certain material, but that the burden would be on the libeled victim to alert them to libelous speech on certain sites.

“This is a minimal burden on the good corporate citizens like Google who already do this, but there’s currently no legal obligation to do so,” Lukey says. “[My proposed legislation] would make this a legal obligation.”

On the criminal side, Lukey says the little-used Internet Stalking Act was amended several years ago to include conduct on the Internet, but the language is unclear as to how an individual crosses state lines to harass someone. She’s working to clarify the language and expand it to include individuals subjected to threats and intimidation on the Internet, so law enforcement can track an IP address.

Lukey hopes to have her proposed legislation sponsored by two U.S. senators she’s been talking with, but won’t yet name. (Lukey jokes that knowing Kerry personally doesn’t hurt — the two went to law school together — but the Massachusetts senator’s foreign relations committee connections aren’t ideal for getting a domestic bill passed.)

Lukey hopes to have something passed by the time she becomes president of the American College of Trial Lawyers in October, but realizes that timetable is probably unrealistic.

“I know these things take a long time,” Lukey says. “And I don’t think that this will be a pressing interest to anyone unless a tragedy occurs that puts it in the news.”

“Hopefully it’s not me.”

Share
Posted in Acts of Violence, Feminism and Law, Feminism and Technology | 1 Comment

Obama’s Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women’s Issues

President Obama appointed Melanne Verveer as Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women’s Issues:  

Melanne Verveer is Co-Founder, Chair and Co-CEO of Vital Voices Global Partnership, an international nonprofit that invests in emerging women leaders – pioneers of economic, political and social progress in their countries. Prior to founding Vital Voices, Verveer served as Assistant to the President and Chief of Staff to the First Lady in the Clinton Administration and was chief assistant to then First Lady Hillary Clinton in her international activities. Verveer also took the lead in establishing the President’s Interagency Council on Women, which serves as a model for governments to address issues of concern to women.

Previously, Verveer served as Executive Vice President of People for the American Way, a civil rights and constitutional liberties organization where she played a key role in the passage of several landmark civil rights bills. She was Coordinator for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs for the U.S. Catholic Conference, Field Manager of Common Cause and worked in the U.S. House and Senate as Legislative Director and Special Assistant respectively. Verveer is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, Women’s Foreign Policy Group, the Washington Institute on Foreign Affairs and Women In International Security.

The President’s decision to nominate an Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women’s Issues is unprecedented and reflects the elevated importance of global women’s issues to the President and his entire Administration.

The full White House press release is here.  Ambassador Verveer was confirmed by the Senate earlier this month.

I applaud President Obama’s recognition of the “elevated importance of global women’s issues.”  I hope that Ambassador Verveer has a broad portfolio and that in her new role, she can be a voice for democracy and women’s rights all over the world.

That being said . . . I can’t help but think that it’s intellectually and emotionally easier for many of us to decry sexism and injustice in other countries than to address profound issues that confront women in our own country.  Women are more likely than men to be living in poverty.  Over 25% of African-American women are living in poverty.  Latina poverty is close to that.  Daycare is expensive.  Health care is expensive.  One Department of Justice study (here) reports that 25% of all women have experienced sexual assault or other physical assault during their lifetimes.  More than a million women are stalked each year (report here).  And the United States thinks of itself as a leader in the treatment of women?  The laws of this country have done much to improve women’s access to education and employment, but still there are so many women cannot feed themselves and their families.

Domestically, we now have a  White House Council on Women and Girls.  Its purpose?  “[T]o ensure that American women and girls are treated fairly in all matters of public policy,” President Obama said (here).  We hope.  We wait.

-Bridget Crawford

Share
Posted in Acts of Violence, Feminism and Politics, Women and Economics | Comments Off on Obama’s Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women’s Issues

“It wasn’t singer Susan Boyle who was ugly on Britain’s Got Talent so much as our reaction to her”

Tanya Gold in The Guardian:

… When Susan had finished singing, and Piers had finished gasping, he said this. It was a comment of incredible spite. “When you stood there with that cheeky grin and said, ‘I want to be like Elaine Paige’, everyone was laughing at you. No one is laughing now.” And it was over to Amanda Holden, a woman most notable for playing a psychotic hairdresser in the Manchester hair-extensions saga Cutting It. “I am so thrilled,” said Amanda, “because I know that everybody was against you.” “Everybody was against you,” she said, as if Susan might have been hanged for her presumption. Why? Can’t “ugly” people dream, you flat-packed, hair-ironed, over-plucked monstrous fool?

I know what you will say. You will say that Paul Potts, the fat opera singer with the equally squashed face who won Britain’s Got Talent in 2007, had just as hard a time at his first audition. I looked it up on YouTube. He did not. “I wasn’t expecting that,” said Simon to Paul. “Neither was I,” said Amanda. “You have an incredible voice,” said Piers. And that was it. No laughter, or invitations to paranoia, or mocking wolf-whistles, or smirking, or derision.

We see this all the time in popular culture. Do you ever stare at the TV and wonder where the next generation of Judi Denchs and Juliet Stevensons have gone? Have they fallen down a Rada wormhole? Yes. They’re not there, because they aren’t pretty enough to get airtime. This lust for homogeneity in female beauty means that when someone who doesn’t resemble a diagram in a plastic surgeon’s office steps up to the microphone, people fall about and treat us to despicable sub-John Gielgud gestures of amazement.

Susan will probably win Britain’s Got Talent. She will be the little munter that could sing, served up for the British public every Saturday night. Look! It’s “ugly”! It sings! And I know that we think that this will make us better people. But Susan Boyle will be the freakish exception that makes the rule. By raising this Susan up, we will forgive ourselves for grinding every other Susan into the dust. It will be a very partial and poisoned redemption. Because Britain’s Got Malice. Sing, Susan, sing – to an ugly crowd that doesn’t deserve you.

I wouldn’t have articulated it in quite the same way, but I think Gold is essentially correct. When Simon tells Susan Boyle she is a “little tiger” I really wanted to throw up. She rolls it off with a lot of equanimity and class. The only thing that makes watching the portions of the video clip in which the judges are speaking tolerable to me is the utter joy the entire experience seems to bring to Susan Boyle. Listen to the clip without watching it by burying it behind other windows, and see if it sounds different to you then when you watch it. (Incidentally, unlike Golden I did think the judges were condescending toward Paul Potts, particularly when Amanda Holden refers to him as “a little lump of coal” that’s “going to turn into a diamond.” But I agree that Susan Boyle got far worse.)

–Ann Bartow

ETA: See also.

ETA2: Link round-up of like minded sentiments here!

Share
Posted in Academia, Feminism and Culture, Feminist Legal Scholarship, Sexism in the Media | Comments Off on “It wasn’t singer Susan Boyle who was ugly on Britain’s Got Talent so much as our reaction to her”

Best Sarah Haskins Video Yet

Share
Posted in Feminism and Culture, Sexism in the Media, Sociolinguistics | Comments Off on Best Sarah Haskins Video Yet

Another Law Review Enters the “Where Are The Women” Sweepstakes: The new issue of the NYU Law Review features 0 articles by women and one note out of three.

Via Concurring Opinions, the ToC

ARTICLES

Originalism Is Bunk
Mitchell N. Berman

Class Certification in the Age of Aggregate Proof
Richard A. Nagareda

Temporary-Effect Legislation, Political Accountability, and Fiscal Restraint
George K. Yin
NOTES

Limiting Preemption in Environmental Law: An Analysis of the Cost-Externalization Argument and California Assembly Bill 1493
Brian T. Burgess

The Implementation of “Balanced Diversity” Through the Class Action Fairness Act
Jacob R. Karabell

New Dirty War Judgments in Argentina: National Courts and Domestic Prosecutions of International Human Rights Violations
Margarita K. O’Donnell

Share
Posted in Academia, Feminism and Law, The Underrepresentation of Women | 8 Comments

Miley Cyrus: A”Little White”What?!

According to People Magazine (here), Oscar-winning actor Jamie Foxx expressed some pretty negative opinions about various female performers on his Sirius radio show, advising actor Miley Cyrus to “make a sex tape and grow up. Get like Britney Spears and do some heroin. Do like Lindsay Lohan … and get some crack in your pipe.”(Source here.) This has some asking, “Can you remember when Imus was thrown off the radio?”  

As a believer in free speech (even speech I don’t like), I wouldn’t want to see Foxx pulled from his radio show. Like Imus, he has apologized.   And maybe it matters, too, that the women he dissed are not exactly a college basketball team. In any case, it is perhaps some consolation that comments like Foxx’s perform at least the service of lending insight into the way some people are thinking, even though (thankfully) most would not utter them in public.

-John Humbach

Share
Posted in Feminism and Culture, Race and Racism | Comments Off on Miley Cyrus: A”Little White”What?!

“You Can’t Trust Anyone These Days, Not Even Yourself”

The sanitary kit includes Masturbator’s Condom, a latex glove and a moist towelette…

Share
Posted in Bloggenpheffer, It's satire, in case that requires pointing out | Comments Off on “You Can’t Trust Anyone These Days, Not Even Yourself”

“Pornocalypse Now”

Over at Adbusters, Douglas Haddow talks about masculinity and porn. Via.

Share
Posted in Coerced Sex, Feminism and Culture, Sociolinguistics | Comments Off on “Pornocalypse Now”

The Triumph of Talent Over Sexism

Watch the looks of shock come over the faces of the judges…and question why anyone thinks talent is related to someone’s external appearance.  Video here.

–Leigh Goodmark

Share
Posted in Feminism and Culture | Comments Off on The Triumph of Talent Over Sexism

Bullying, Homophobia and Gender/Sexuality Norms

In her NYTimes blog yesterday, Judith Warner described the cruel bullying that led to the suicide of 11-year old  Carl Joseph Walker-Hoover.  Warner  depicts a brutal enforcement of gender/sexuality norms among boys but a much more liberal construction of gender among girls.   Warner’s piece reminds us that those of us who think about gender need to understand and attempt to shift what masculinity means if we are ever to achieve some level of gender equality or balance.

Warner’s full post is here.

-Darren Rosenblum

Share
Posted in Acts of Violence | 1 Comment

What the United States Postal Service Understands that Michigan Law Review Doesn’t

The United States Postal Service seems to understand — in a way that the Michigan Law Review doesn’t (see here) — that gender balance is important.  In choosing “Civil Rights Pioneers” to honor in its commemorative stamp series above, the USPS highlighted women’s and men’s contributions.  That’s true even though some of the women are far less “famous” than their male counterparts.  Would it be so difficult for the Michigan Law Review to look for gender balance in book reviewers, too?  Ditto the Columbia Business School in choosing  speakers for panels at  (see here) or William & Mary when inviting speakers to a Symposium (see here)?  I don’t believe in quotas of any kind, but I do believe that inclusivity requires effort, outreach, aforethought.  

Say what we will about the leadership and functioning of the USPS (a new rate hike coming in May!), the USPS chose 12 fine leaders to honor:

Top row of stamps:

Mary Church Terrell (1863-1954)
Throughout her long life as a writer, activist, and lecturer, she was a powerful advocate for racial justice and women’s rights in America and abroad.

Mary White Ovington (1865-1951)
This journalist and social worker believed passionately in racial equality and was a founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).

J. R. Clifford (1848-1933)
He was the first black attorney licensed in West Virginia; in two landmark cases before his state’s Supreme Court, he attacked racial discrimination in education.

Joel Elias Spingarn (1875-1939)
Because coverage of blacks in the media tended to be negative, he endowed the prestigious Spingarn Medal, awarded annually since 1915, to highlight black achievement.

Oswald Garrison Villard (1872-1949)
He was one of the founders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and wrote the”Call”leading to its formation.

Daisy Gatson Bates (1914-1999)
She mentored nine black students who enrolled at all-white Central High School in Little Rock, AR, in 1957; the students used her home as an organizational hub.

Bottom row of stamps:

Charles Hamilton Houston (1895-1950)
This lawyer and educator was a main architect of the civil rights movement. He believed in using laws to better the lives of underprivileged citizens.

Walter White (1893-1955)
Blue eyes and a fair complexion enabled this leader of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) to make daring undercover investigations.

Medgar Evers (1925-1963)
He served with distinction as an official of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in Mississippi until his assassination in 1963.

Fannie Lou Hamer (1917-1977)
She was a Mississippi sharecropper who fought for black voting rights and spoke for many when she said,”I’m sick and tired of being sick and tired.”

Ella Baker (1903-1986)
Her lifetime of activism made her a skillful organizer. She encouraged women and young people to assume positions of leadership in the civil rights movement.

Ruby Hurley (1909-1980)
As a courageous and capable official with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), she did difficult, dangerous work in the South.

These biographical details come from the official USPS announcement  here.

Michigan Law Review, let’s see how you do next year.  

-Bridget Crawford

Share
Posted in Feminist Legal History, Feminist Legal Scholarship, Feminists in Academia | 1 Comment

Day of Silence

Tomorrow is the 13th annual Day of Silence, a day when students remain silent to draw attention to anti-LGBT name-calling, bullying, and harassment in schools. There was a highly disturbing story in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette today in advance of the Day of Silence. The article, which is titled “Gay Students Don’t Feel Safe in Pa. Schools, Survey Says,” indicated that a survey of 242 Pennsylvania students showed that:

•    Almost 9 of 10 have been harassed verbally in the past year.
• More than half said they had been harassed physically.
• More than a quarter said they had been physically assaulted.
• Ninety-eight percent sometimes, often or frequently hear the word “gay” used in a negative way.
• Most of those harassed or assaulted didn’t report it, but only about a third of those who did report it found school staff intervened effectively.
• Because they felt unsafe, 39 percent had skipped class at least once in the preceding month and 44 percent had missed at least one day of school.

-Tony Infanti

Share
Posted in LGBT Rights | Comments Off on Day of Silence

Washington to Upgrade Its Domestic Partnerships

The Washington House of Representatives passed a bill yesterday that will afford registered domestic partners all of the rights and obligations afforded to married couples. The bill passed the state’s Senate earlier this year, and the governor has indicated that she will sign it into law.

Washington has had a domestic partnership registry since July 2007; however, registered domestic partners were initially afforded only a limited number of the benefits and obligations associated with marriage, including hospital visitation rights, inheritance rights, and priority in being allowed to make medical decisions on behalf of an incapacitated partner who has not executed an advance directive. That list of benefits was expanded last year. Once signed into law, in the words of one legislator:  “This bill completes our work on domestic partnerships by making sure that we state clearly our intention to treat domestic partners in our state equally.”

-Tony Infanti

Share
Posted in LGBT Rights | Comments Off on Washington to Upgrade Its Domestic Partnerships