Abortion E-Cards

OK, so sending an e-card, made by a sanitary napkin manufacturer (complete with advertising on the card), to celebrate/honor/ sympathize with (???) someone’s period may be a weird idea.   See Where Wings Take Dream.   But  how about an abortion e-card?    Exhale, an after-abortion counseling hotline, is now offering the cards on  its website.   (Read more at the Reproductive Rights Prof Blog.)

Given the blame and  anger anti-choice advocates shower on the approximately  one third of women who will have an abortion by the age of 45, it seems to  me that these cards  could be a good idea.   At least they are offered by a  not-for-profit counseling  service that has carefully created a variety of cards to reflect how different women might feel about their abortions.   But it might be hard to  know which one is  the right message to send, since the themes vary quite a bit, from “encouragement” (“you did the right thing”) to  “spirituality”  (“healing is possible”).

-Caitlin Borgmann

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Penelope Andrews, “Women’s Human Rights and the Conversation Across Cultures”

andrews.jpg Penelope Andrews

The abstract reports: “This comment examines the vision of women’s rights and equality as outlined in CEDAW. It raises some of the possibilities and limitations associated with universalizing legal norms in a context of enormous global disparities, particularly in material and cultural terms.” Download it here!

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More About Online Harassment

Today’s Chron has an article entitled: 2 Deans Denounce Online Law-Students’ Discussion Board That Allows Anonymous Personal Attacks which reports in pertinent part:

A law-students’ chat site whose operators have refused to remove derogatory, sexist, and racist postings about individual students has sparked a furor and prompted public rebukes by two law-school deans — one from the school where a co-founder of the site is currently enrolled, and the other from a school in which students have been personally targeted.

The Internet discussion board for current and prospective law students is one of several boards hosted by AutoAdmit, which was co-founded by Anthony Ciolli, a third-year law student at the University of Pennsylvania, and Jarret Cohen, a 23-year-old insurance salesman. It bills itself as “the most prestigious law-school discussion board in the world.” Even its detractors say the site contains some useful insights about law firms and schools.

But it also contains postings that degrade individual students, with offensive comments that include sexual references and racist jabs. Some of those students say the derogatory comments have turned up on Google searches and have hurt their chances of getting jobs. …

… Michael A. Fitts, dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School, and Gary Clinton, the school’s dean of student affairs, also released a statement last week regarding the controversy.

“As a matter of law, and under the university’s own policies on speech, we feel we have no basis for disciplinary action against the co-owner, though we have had numerous discussions with him about the board and its very unfortunate impact when ad hominem attacks are made against defenseless individuals,” the statement said.

“While these activities are outside the purview of the law school,” it added, “they may well be subject to laws governing libel and defamation brought by individuals subjected to the personal attacks one sees online, and they may increasingly become the subject of concern by bar-admissions committees.”

W. Bradley Wendel, a professor of law at Cornell University, said he discusses such concerns in his professional-responsibility class.

“Students need to know that there are character and fitness committees out there that can consider these things,” he said, referring to bar-admissions committees that have been known to reject candidates on the grounds that their actions show a propensity to violate rules governing the profession. “I don’t like that whole process, in which committees can make invalid inferences about what people might do in the future, but students need to be aware of the potential consequences before they go popping off online.”

Creating a fake Yahoo account and posting anonymously may not protect a student if a defamation lawsuit is filed and the site is required to turn over identifying information about its users. “I suspect that anonymity can be pierced pretty easily,” Mr. Wendel said.

In a posting on a legal-ethics blog, he urged students to use caution in what they write online. “Even though I don’t think acting like a complete jackass should be a basis for denial of admission, if I were one of the students who made some of the worst of these comments, I’d be sweating bullets right now,” he wrote.

Reputation Defender, which has benefited from positive mentions in the WaPo (see also) related to this controversy, not to mention a virtual commercial in the guise of a news report on NPR last fall, also helpfully gets its named mentioned once again. The Chron article states:

A group called ReputationDefender is representing four women who say their reputations have been smeared by AutoAdmit, and it has hired a law firm to consider a civil or criminal complaint on their behalf. The postings about the women included references to alleged sexually transmitted diseases and a suggestion that fellow students photograph one of the women in the locker room with a cellphone camera.

ReputationDefender’s chief executive, Michael Fertik, founded the group last year after graduating from Harvard Law School in 2005. His service attempts to remove malicious online postings, and is representing the women free “because this case is so outrageous.”

Mr. Cohen, the site’s co-founder, blamed Mr. Fertik for capitalizing on the furor. “ReputationDefender is trying to use this as a steppingstone to promote themselves, and they’re using these women as sacrificial lambs,” he said. “Instead of just coming to me and talking to me, they’ve whipped up this public frenzy that’s just causing a lot more anger and resentment.”

He said he “truly feels bad” for a Yale law student who learned that her photographs had been posted on a site linked to an AutoAdmit chat board. The site included her name and a description of her breasts, as well as comments from viewers.

What would have happened if the affected women had gone directly to Cohen? The Chron story also reports: “Mr. Cohen said in an interview that one of the women who had been asking for two years that posts be removed had threatened to sue him. “I don’t respond to people like that,” he said.” [Emphasis added]. Sheesh. Somehow I doubt the sincerity of Cohen’s putative sympathy for the referenced law student.

Meanwhile, however, ReputationDefender (“RD”) is not a “group,” RD is a for profit company. If it is representing women who have been defamed on AutoAdmit/XOXOHTH for free (as stated above), or for “nearly no fee” (as was asserted in an e-mail to me that was reprinted here), I suspect that this is because of all the favorable publicity the situation has garnered. Now, that may turn out to be a boon for the women, which is a very good thing, as they deserve a break after what they have endured. Sooner or later, however ReputationDefender will need to turn a profit, and it will likely do so off the backs of future victims who can afford their services. Those who cannot may be out of luck if their situations do not warrant front page coverage by the Washington Post. A better, more just long term solution would facilitate self-help in these matters, rather than a new business model.

UPDATE: The Virginia Law Weekly reported on this issue, below is an excerpt:

… more than one of the women whose pictures were posted to the”Top 14″site have taken matters into their own hands. Some of the women have been able to determine who was responsible for submitting pictures of them without their consent, and have confronted these students.

This was possible because a UVA Law student (who wishes to remain anonymous for fear of harassment by AutoAdmit members) deceived the”Top 14″contest’s organizers and obtained access to the email account through which they were running the site. This student subsequently downloaded all of the account’s messages, and in some cases those emails found their way to the women whose pictures were contained therein. The Law Weekly has viewed the emails in question, several of which do indeed contain identifying information, including names.

The women also told the Law Weekly that one of the more frustrating aspects of the”Top 14″events was that AutoAdmit’s administrators refused to remove any of the discussion from their message board and declined to prevent the information from being accessible through Google. In a recent Washington Post article, then-administrator Anthony Ciolli was quoted as saying that he”almost never censor[s] content, no matter how abhorrent it may be”because he is a”strong believer[] in freedom of expression and the marketplace of ideas.”

Similarly, some First Amendment activists quotes in recent media reports about AutoAdmit cautioned against censorship, suggesting instead that victims of online harassment pursue remedies in court if the attacks rise to the level of actionable tort or crime.

In response to this argument, Dean Jeffries notes that”the First Amendment protects a great many instances of speech that is deeply reprehensible. No one wants to study and work in an environment in which tort and crime are the only norms of personal responsibility and behavior. …

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Fuck, SSRN Rankings

SSRN is the Social Science Research Network, a for profit online depository and distribution network for academic papers with an all-male Board of Trustees. My law school pays a fee to SSRN so that my colleagues and I can upload our academic papers into the SSRN database. We do this so that interested parties with Internet access can download (and optimally read and cite to) our writings.

In addition to charging educational institutions membership fees, SSRN generates revenue through advertisements. Recent advertisements I saw at the site included ones touting “term papers for sale.” In this post at Credit Slips, Angie Littwin, who recently uploaded a paper arguing for major changes in the credit-card market, noted with some chagrin that:

…my SSRN page is hawking credit cards. If you look down the side of the web page that displays my abstract, there are five Google text ads, all related to credit. One offers a low-rate credit card. A couple offer debt relief or credit counseling. One even offers debt-settlement services, an unsavory offshoot of credit counseling wherein the company advises its clients to stop paying their creditors and instead save up for a future settlement payment.

Blech. Another problematic aspect of SSRN is that the number of downloads per paper is being touted as a valid measure of the worthiness of the paper, the academic who wrote it, and the educational institution employing her. Brian Leiter appropriately offers a lot of important and well-reasoned caveats about this. One choice that he made in his most recent “download tournament” calculations, however, is a little perplexing, and it is responsible for the F word in the title to this post. Leiter excluded Chris Fairman’s heavily downloaded paper, Fuck, which he refers as “one provocatively titled article by Christopher Fairman.” In addition to SSRN, “Fuck” is available at BEPress and at 28 Cardozo L. Rev 1711 (2007).

I just visited the abstract to Fairman’s paper at SSRN, and it was accompanied by Google advertisements for what appear to be diploma mills, which is much more offensive to me as an academic than a mere cuss word, powerful as the word may be in some contexts. Sure Fairman’s article is provocative, but it is genuine scholarship, and not simply some kind of SSRN-gaming gimmick. The piece also has a noticeably feminist bent (see this post), which is why I take particular interest. Fairman has written an essay discussing this situation that can be accessed here.

–Ann Bartow

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Ever See That “Bride Has Massive Hair Wig Out” Video On YouTube?

If not you can watch it here. Did you wonder which family member or so-called friend would put something like that out there for public consumption? Or did you realize that it was phoney, part of an advertising campaign? See also, where the clip’s protagonist is referred to as “Bridezilla.” According to the Sunsilk Haircare Brand: The video was created to dramatize that “bad hair” is one of the challenges faced by young women, many of whom have experienced their own “wig-out” moments. Gosh, thanks Sunsilk, I’m sure “young women” were really validated and empowered by your video.

–Ann Bartow

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Trial Lawyer’s Prayer

Here. Hey secular humanists, don’t freak – it’s satirical! Via Mythago. And if you thought it was funny, see also.

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The Number of Women Authors Published In The March 2007 Edition Of The Yale Law Journal?

Zero! And how many women authors were published in the previous (January 2007) issue? Zero again!

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Where Wings Take Dream

Over a year ago (in this post) I noted that in my pre-law-professor life I often worked odd jobs to make extra money. For a while I was part of a team that traveled to a series of churches and community centers to interview people about health and beauty aids on behalf of the large corporation that manufactured and marketed them. I did consumer research on the way people reacted to toothbrushes, deodorant, mouthwashes, lipstick, pain relievers, and for one ponderously long interval of time, sanitary napkins. My job was to talk women into wearing a particular brand of sanitary napkin, and then get them to agree to return the following day to answer an invasive series of questions about how wearing it made them feel, and yes, it was just as squicky as it sounds, but the women did get paid for their trouble. At first we offered twenty dollars, but got few takers. Even when the”honorarium”got boosted to $50, many women were squeamish about the idea, and it took a great deal of persuasion to get them to agree to participate, and I had a quota to meet, so I’ll always love the women who, after the honorarium was mentioned, said things like:”For fifty dollars, I’ll wear it stuck to my head for you! Even if it has wings!”

I don’t know where all that market research went wrong, but sanitary napkin manufacturers do not seem to understand their customers at all. Feminist law prof Caitlin Borgmann noted recently: “My favorite always was the patronizing,”Kotex Understands,”on my panty liners – as though some big, undoubtedly male-populated profit-making corporation could really”understand”what my periods are like. Or like I would even want them to. Ick! Just give me the damn pads and stay out of it.”

And for some reason “Always” is now using the slogan: “Have a Happy Period!” This is not going over too well with some consumers. Recently a friend sent me a link to this post recounting a letter to a company representative, which says in pertinent part:

… As brand manager in the feminine-hygiene division, you’ve no doubt seen quite a bit of research on what exactly happens during your customers’ monthly visits from Aunt Flo. Therefore, you must know about the bloating, puffiness, and cramping we endure, and about our intense mood swings, crying jags, and out-of-control behavior. You surely realize it’s a tough time for most women. In fact, only last week, my friend Jennifer fought the violent urge to shove her boyfriend’s testicles into a George Foreman Grill just because he told her he thought Grey’s Anatomy was written by drunken chimps. Crazy! The point is, sir, you of all people must realize that America is just crawling with homicidal maniacs in capri pants. Which brings me to the reason for my letter.

Last month, while in the throes of cramping so painful I wanted to reach inside my body and yank out my uterus, I opened an Always maxi pad, and there, printed on the adhesive backing, were these words: “Have a Happy Period.”

Are you f***ing kidding me?

What I mean is, does any part of your tiny middle-manager brain really think happiness — “actual smiling, laughing happiness” — is possible during a menstrual period? Did anything mentioned above sound the least bit pleasurable? Well, did it, James? FYI, unless you’re some kind of sick S&M freak girl, there will never be anything “happy” about a day in which you have to jack yourself up on Motrin and Kahlua and lock yourself in your house just so you don’t march down to the local Walgreens armed with a hunting rifle and a sketchy plan to end your life in a blaze of glory.

For the love of God, pull your head out, man. If you just have to slap a moronic message on a maxi pad, wouldn’t it make more sense to say something that’s actually pertinent, like “Put Down the Hammer” or “Vehicular Manslaughter Is Wrong”? Or are you just picking on us?

Sir, please inform your accounting department that, effective immediately, there will be an $8 drop in monthly profits, for I have chosen to take my maxi-pad business elsewhere. And though I will certainly miss your Flexi-Wings, I will not for one minute miss your brand of condescending bullshit. And that’s a promise I will keep.

Undaunted, “Always” boasts a “beinggirl” website, via which you can send “Have a Happy Period” e-cards like this:

always3.gif

always1.jpg

always2.jpg

I’m trying to picture the circumstances under which I would ever contemplate sending one of these. Or how I would react to receiving one from a student.

–Ann Bartow

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Excerpt From An E-mail From A Friend Who Is Teaching In A Foreign Country

“I am off to my second meal with the President of the University in one week. Compared with no meals in [all my] years at [my home institution]. The head of the foreign students office gave me a Playboy desk calendar–I was wondering was there a subtle message since the night before I had logged on to a gay site. When I took it home and opened in, it was all Playboy logo household merchandise–no bunnys. Although, I am trying to imagine who in their right mind would sleep on Playboy Bunny sheets….”

(For more from the same wonderful friend, click here.)

–Ann Bartow

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Sexual Politics

An interesting article about Kate Millett was published 8 years ago in Salon. Here is an excerpt:

“There is no denying the misery and stress of life,” she wrote in “The Loony-Bin Trip.” “The swarms of fears, the blocks to confidence, the crises of decision and choice.” This is her dark self, the one diagnosed as “constitutionally psychotic,” who, against her will, is given electroshock treatments. This is not the self-possessed mother of the feminist movement, this is the other woman who, Millett admits, is constantly wavering — “I doubt everything,” she says.

The feeding frenzy became too much for her. “How does one get out of the movement?” she asked. “Where is the exit? … I can’t be Kate Millett any more … A joke at cocktail parties … Just let me watch it from the sidelines. Like other women can. Enjoy the luxury of looking on while someone else does it for us.” Be careful of what you wish for. Over the next three decades, she slipped into obscurity. Millett stopped being Kate Millett, America’s favorite feminist.

The reality is that Kate Millett has continued doing what she had always done: writing, art and activism. In 1973, she published “The Prostitution Papers,” a defense of prostitutes’ rights; the following year, she came out with “Flying”; and in 1977, “Sita,” about an ill-fated love affair with another woman. In 1979, Millett went to Iran to work for women’s rights, was soon expelled, and wrote about the experience in “Going to Iran.” “The Politics of Cruelty,” published in 1994 — which brought her more attention than any book since “Sexual Politics” — exposed the ongoing use of state-sanctioned torture in dozens of countries. Some of her books get attention; many fall off the charts. Universities and small galleries occasionally exhibit her work, and colleges ask her to lecture, although less and less often. And she’s managed to hold onto her farm, today a well-established artists’ colony.

The Salon piece references an essay Millett published a year earlier, in 1998, called “The Feminist Time Forgot.” More recently, this essay about Millett appeared.

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Betty Spence, “How We Talk About Women”

Here is an excerpt:

On the Dec. 19 edition of MSNBC’s “Hardball,” Chris Matthews used language that reveals a troubling bias against women — one that is all too common in the media and is conveyed by the subtle weapon of word choice.

It occurred during a segment about Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, which he led off by saying she “may be the frontrunner for the Democrats in 2008 … but she is still playing it coy.”

Webster defines coy as “reluctance to make a definite commitment,” but the first definition, and certainly the connotation, is “cute, coquettish.” Coy is a diminutive, rarely applied to men.

However, this was but a prelude to Matthews’ linguistic disparagement. He then replayed Meredith Vieira’s “Today Show” interview where the Senator called the decision to run an “intensely personal” one she’d make in the new year. When Vieira pressed Clinton, she added, “I’m very honored that people are urging me to run and saying they want to sign up. Yet at the end of the day, I want to be sure that my decision is right for me, for my family, for my party, for my country.”

Cut back to Matthews, who asked, “When is a politician like Hillary Clinton or anyone else going to admit they have the ‘A’ word, ambition, and stop with this coy thing … and just like a striptease … saying she’s flattered by all the attention?”

Striptease?

This is how people talk about women. With lightning speed, Matthews had sexualized the conversation via an out-of-context image. Why? It doesn’t take an analyst to figure it out: a woman in the world’s most powerful position — now that’s scary; but a stripper, well, we can handle that. …

Read the entire essay via Women’s Voices for Change.

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“Britney Jean Spears is not an idea. She’s a 25-year-old mother of two who is coming apart at the seams. In public.”

Those words are from this Leonard Pitts column that was published 3/9/07 in the Miama Herald. Here’s another excerpt:

… To the degree I think about her at all, it’s usually as a laugh line. People ask if I miss being a pop music critic, having spent the first 18 years of my professional life in that capacity. I tell them I give thanks every morning that I don’t have to pretend to take Britney Spears seriously. It’s always good for a chuckle.

That’s what Spears was to me: a punch line.

Am I the only one? Or isn’t it true that between her two-day first marriage, her Madonna kiss on national television, her panties-optional dress code, she long ago became, even for her fans, a person whose attraction lay less in her modest talents than in the sense you never knew what she might do next? She was a little crazy. A little out of control. A little clueless in ways that made you feel better about the garbage of your own life.

As in, maybe I ain’t no Nobel Prize winner, but at least I have sense enough to wear underwear when I go out.

And you could say this, talk about her like she wasn’t in the room, because she was not, in some sense, real. Spears was an abstract, an idea. Not a troubled young woman who has been in and out of rehab in recent days, a woman for whom fame and fortune apparently have proven inadequate to fill the emptiness inside.

The abstraction is not surprising: Whatever media touch, they objectify. Some years ago, I got an e-mail from an outraged reader who, as the saying goes, called me everything but a child of God. I e-mailed him back and we ended up having a perfectly civil exchange. I remember he seemed embarrassed, as if he had not quite realized that the byline represented an actual human being who actually might read his invective. He had hurled it at an idea of me.

But I am not an idea. …

I know that strange behavior by famous men also gets a fair amount of press coverage sometimes, but photo for photo, word for word, it’s my strong impression that “celebrity” women get mocked a lot more frequently and viciously than “celebrity” men do. See also. And of course their careers are typically shorter, and they generally earn less money.

–Ann Bartow

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A Portrait of “Generation Next” by The Pew Research Center

Summary here; full report here. “The report is divided into four main sections: (1) Outlook and World View, (2) Technology and Lifestyle, (3) Politics and Policy, and (4) Values and Social Issues.”

Below is an excerpt from the report’s introduction:

… In reassuring ways, the generation that came of age in the shadow of Sept. 11 shares the characteristics of other generations of young adults. They are generally happy with their lives and optimistic about their futures. Moreover, Gen Nexters feel that educational and job opportunities are better for them today than for the previous generation. At the same time, many of their attitudes and priorities reflect a limited set of life experiences. Marriage, children and an established career remain in the future for most of those in Generation Next.

More than two-thirds see their generation as unique and distinct, yet not all self-evaluations are positive. A majority says that “getting rich” is the main goal of most people in their age group, and large majorities believe that casual sex, binge drinking, illegal drug use and violence are more prevalent among young people today than was the case 20 years ago.

In their political outlook, they are the most tolerant of any generation on social issues such as immigration, race and homosexuality. They are also much more likely to identify with the Democratic Party than was the preceding generation of young people, which could reshape politics in the years ahead. Yet the evidence is mixed as to whether the current generation of young Americans will be any more engaged in the nation’s civic life than were young people in the past, potentially blunting their political impact. …

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Pelvic Exams and Informed Consent

This post at Women’s Health News reports:

The New England Journal of Medicine has a perspective piece by Adam Wolfberg in the current issue (1), “The Patient as Ally : Learning the Pelvic Examination,” which addresses the issue of teaching pelvic examinations to medical students. It provides some telling information about the history of how this exam was taught, stating, “in contrast to ambulatory care, the gynecologic operating room has historically provided medical students with an opportunity to learn this exam: they could perform it in anesthetized patients immediately before surgery.” This practice became extraordinarily controversial when it became more widely known that pelvic exams were often performed on anesthesized surgical patients without their knowledge or consent, as a teaching tool rather than for medical care. According to the piece, “Academic gynecologists were accused of using patients as unwitting “training dummies” : a reaction exacerbated by the report’s revelation that students who had completed an Ob/Gyn clerkship were less likely than other students to believe it is important to obtain the patient’s consent for such an exam.”

Read the full post here. The referenced Wolfberg article is available to New England Journal of Medicine subscribers here.

I’ve been aware of this issue for years thanks to the dedicated work of my friend and former South Carolina colleague Robin Fretwell Wilson, who has written several articles on the subject, including Autonomy Suspended: Using Female Patients to Teach Intimate Exams without their Knowledge or Consent and Unauthorized Practice: Teaching Pelvic Examination on Women Under Anesthesia.

–Ann Bartow

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Humorless Feminism: A Continuing Series

Today’s “not funny” entry is this post at The Cheerful Oncologist:

Bad-tempered women ‘can blame it on genes’

Ever wonder why some women seem to be more ill-tempered than others? University of Pittsburgh researchers have found that behaviors such as anger, hostility and aggression may be genetic, rooted in variations in a serotonin receptor gene. Indrani Halder, Ph.D., of the Cardiovascular Behavioral Medicine Program at the University of Pittsburgh, will present the findings today at the American Psychosomatic Society’s Annual Meeting, held in Budapest, Hungary.

I’m also skeptical that one gene can control the mood of women, but then again I’m not taking any chances. Excuse me while I practice my lines:

“Yes, Dear.”
“Right away, Dear.”
“I’m sorry, Dear.”
“It will be a pleasure, Dear.”
“Please don’t hit me.”

Me, I’m skeptical that this sort of allusion to domestic violence can ever be amusing.

–Ann Bartow

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TAP Special Report

TAP.jpg

“The Motherload.”

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“The fact that you can sit here and look at me like I’m insane is fantastic,”Harvard Physics Prof. Melissa Franklin said.

According to this article in the Harvard Crimson:

Harvard’s first tenured woman physics professor, Melissa E.B. Franklin, startled her audience last night when relating some career experiences that became physical in ways she had not quite expected.

“Used to be a professor would push you against a car and stick his tongue in your mouth,”she said.

Franklin, who now teaches Physical Sciences 2 and is one of the few women to lead an introductory science course at Harvard, came to Kirkland House to accept the Spark Award. The award was created this year by student group Women in Science at Harvard-Radcliffe (WISHR) to recognize women who have inspired the next generation of women in science.

The professor, who helped discover the”top quark”:the last quark to be uncovered:was modest about her accomplishments.

“I’d love to be able to say I invented the doo-hickey to do…whatever,”said Franklin, the Mallinckrodt professor of physics.

Franklin, who received a doctorate from Stanford but never went to high school, recounted unpleasant memories of her student career.

“Graduate school was an incredibly painful experience,”Franklin said.”Often graduate students, especially women, end up crying in bathtubs because they haven’t started their problem sets.”

Franklin said women in science today are probably no longer experiencing many of the challenges she had faced.
“The fact that you can sit here and look at me like I’m insane is fantastic,”Franklin said.

But she said society is still pervaded by the notion that women are naturally unsuited to science.

“What hasn’t changed is the fact that many men think that women aren’t the smartest,”Franklin said.”It’s just a belief they hold without having thought about it much.”

Franklin cited the example of former University President Lawrence H. Summers, who drew criticism for his Jan. 2005 remarks on the underrepresentation of women on elite science faculties.

“Larry Summers was a really smart guy, and even he fell back into it,”Franklin said.

But Franklin sees the future in an optimistic light. Believing at first that the flame-shaped award was meant to resemble a tear, Franklin was inspired when she discovered that it was intended to be a spark.

“Now that I know it’s a spark, let’s spark a revolution!”Franklin said. …

The entire article and a photo of Franklin holding her award are here.

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Joan MacLeod Heminway, “Martha Stewart’s Legal Troubles”

marthas.jpg

Editor and Feminist Law Prof Joan MacLeod Heminway is a good friend and brilliant scholar. Here is the Amazon.com description of her new book:

Martha Stewart’s Legal Troubles: Heminway brings together essays written by legal scholars specializing in both white collar crime and securities regulation concerning the varied legal claims made against Martha Stewart in connection with her sale of shares in ImClone Systems Incorporated in December 2001. The articles present interesting historical facts and analytical observations while raising important questions about the use of discretion in public enforcement proceedings (civil and criminal) and the elements of two popular federal claims: obstruction of justice and securities fraud under Rule 10b-5.

The Carolina Academic Press page is here.

–Ann Bartow

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Elizabeth M. Schneider, “The Dangers of Summary Judgment: Gender and Federal Civil Litigation”

The abstract:

This Article examines the problematic application of summary judgment in federal courts through a study of gender cases. Identifying a new dimension of the interrelationship between procedure and gender, I examine the ways in which summary judgment impacts on cases involving gender and gender impacts on judicial decisionmaking on summary judgment, with emphasis on the intersection of Daubert and summary judgment. I analyze summary judgment in federal gender discrimination and tort cases involving women plaintiffs and argue that there is flawed judicial decisionmaking in these cases. I describe empirical data compiled for this Article on whether summary judgment is granted disproportionately against women plaintiffs in federal court. I discuss the special problems of judicial determination of these cases, issues of gender and judging and the need for more diverse decisionmaking, the need for these cases to be heard through live testimony in a public forum, and the way in which summary judgment practice reinforces the troubling “privatization” of federal civil litigation. I conclude that judicial decisionmaking in these cases illustrates the way in which current summary judgment practice permits subtle bias to go unchecked and reveals the dangers of summary judgment generally.

As many readers of this blog already know, Liz Schneider is a fantastic feminist scholar. Downloadable here!

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Adriene Sere, “Sex and Feminism: Who Is Being Silenced?”

The following is an excerpt from a provocative essay by Adriene Sere that was published in 2001, which was brought to my attention by a post at Sinister Girl:

Leftist publications have a problem with radical feminism. They have long maintained an informal ban against publishing radical feminist writers. They refuse to grapple with radical feminism’s critique of male supremacist sexuality as a system of oppression of women. They generally pretend radical feminists don’t exist, except for Andrea Dworkin and Catherine MacKinnon, whose names they try to weld into keywords for “censorship,” “anti-sex,” and “bad kind of feminist.”

Leftist publications do publish liberal feminists and leftist women, thanks in part to the pressures of the feminist movement. There’s a tiny bit of space given to women in the Nation, a little bit more in Z Magazine, and a generous bit more in the Progressive. But whatever the ratio, all publishing access comes under the provisions of an underlying contract: “We will publish your writing. We will even allow you to be stars. Just don’t go there — where Catherine MacKinnon, Andrea Dworkin, and those nameless radical feminists go. That’s taboo territory. Don’t even think about respectfully engaging with these feminists. If you join their ranks, we will treat you the way we treat them. If you even look like their friend, you will no longer be welcome here. We will reward you, so long as you don’t cross that line.”

After decades of this divide-and-conquer strategy, radical feminists might hope that sexist men on the left would simply tire themselves out. After all, how can they keep pummeling those who are made invisible? How can they both bash and erase, year after year? How can they keep getting liberal and leftist women to follow their rules, almost without exception?

Unfortunately, no one is getting tired — except perhaps radical feminists. Women who move in leftist and liberal publishing circles know the rules of the contract, and more and more of them make these rules their own. Many of them take the initiative to bash and erase the “bad feminists” (the two that exist) as a pledge of allegiance to the men and the system around them. …

Whether Sere is correct generally, and whether her observations can be fairly applied to the current feminist legal theory milieu, are queries that I think are worth considering. The essay also made me think about this post by Echidne of the Snakes which really made me sad, because she is one of my favorite bloggers, and she was clearly feeling down when she wrote it. Observing the awful things that some people write when they believe they are anonymous can be really discouraging, especially when there are indications that the sexist commenters identify as “liberal.” It’s part of the campaign to silence feminists, even those who don’t necessarily identify as “radical.”

–Ann Bartow

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Does This Mean That Irony Is Dead? Or That Irony Isn’t Dead? I Get Confused.

Guess what? “ReputationDefender” aggressively defends its own reputation! In response to this post, I received the following e-mail (which I also obtained explicit permission to post here):

Dear Prof. Bartow,
We were admittedly disturbed to read your recent blog posting regarding ReputationDefender. Although you do explicitly state you are not accusing ReputationDefender of posting on AutoAdmit, which we appreciate, we still are concerned that your comments might imply that representatives of ReputationDefender may have posted some of the disparaging remarks comments on AutoAdmit. We are hoping some additional information would help to address and alleviate some of your concerns, as well as those of your readers.

Please let us clearly state: ReputationDefender has never posted on AutoAdmit. (We would be happy to have you compare our IP addresses with those of AutoAdmit posters.) In this particular case, two of our clients have been harassed on AutoAdmit since 2005; ReputationDefender was launched in October 2006. We are representing the women maligned on AutoAdmit for nearly no fee, while investing countless hours and dollars in efforts on their behalf. Furthermore, we are trying to actually solve the problem exemplified by AutoAdmit, not merely change the nature of it, through our petition to establish a dispute resolution mechanism on AutoAdmit. We are not profiting from this petition. Indeed, it is our hope to find a way to prevent incidents like this one from occurring in the future, not simply to ameliorate some of the damages once the incidents have already occurred.

Please let us know if you have any additional questions or comments about our company or our work. We’re happy to provide more information, or further discuss any of these issues.

Sincerely,

RDBlogger

RDBlogger
info@reputationdefender.com

How incredible is it that the person who e-mailed me in defense of ReputationDefender, “RDBlogger,” was not willing to reveal her or his real name?

Meanwhile, as you can plainly see by reading the linked post, what I wrote was:

“Xoxohth is a board that encourages anonymous commenting, and while I imagine some of the commenters likely are law students, my guess is that some of them are not, and are instead people with other agendas. I make no particular accusation against ReputationDefender, as I have no evidence or reason to believe that anyone associated with this company has participated anonymously in online harassment of law students or anybody else. It is, however, hard not to see that there are financial incentives to do so.”

I stand by this assertion.

Now consider the e-mail’s embedded parenthetical: “(We would be happy to have you compare our IP addresses with those of AutoAdmit posters.)” To do this would require AutoAdmit to reveal to me the IP addresses of its posters. How likely is this? Or can ReputationDefender obtain the IP addresses of AutoAdmit posters on its own? And if so, how? And even if they can figure out to do this as a technological matter, would it be legal for the company to do so? And then for it to disclose them to me?

Such a comparison would also require me to trust ReputationDefender to honestly and accurately reveal to me the IP addresses that everyone associated with the company uses. Should I trust them to do this, when a representative has e-mailed me from behind a pseudonym? Would you?

As far as the fees being charged by ReputationDefender, I have no specific information about what amounts unnamed clients may be paying, and no ability to verify any information the company provides in this regard, if it actually provides any, which so far it hasn’t. I have no idea about whether the “petition” has been successful, or whether it is likely to be, in “establish[ing] a dispute resolution mechanism” but I have my doubts. Sooner or later ReputationDefender needs to turn a profit somehow, and I am simply not grasping the nuances of the business model. And now I am even more deeply suspicious of this entity.

–Ann Bartow

Update: Lest there be any confusion on this point, I think content posted at AutoAdmit/XOXOHTH is extremely problematic and troubling. It is, as a friend noted, “a disgusting cesspool of infantile morons, sociopaths, and misogynistic freaks.” My point is that it would be better for the government to step in than to have shady for profit”reputation defense”entities attempting to financially exploit women who are already being victimized. I am really uncomfortable with the way that a dodgy for profit entity like Reputation Defender is exploiting the situation for its own ends, like some kind of sordid protection racket – “Nice reputation you got there, shame if something happened to it.”

NB: There isn’t a single woman on Reputation Defender’s “Management Team.”

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Something About The Timing Gives Me Pause

Over at Concurring Opinions, David Hoffman began a post about the WaPo article on Xoxohth’s “law school hotties” contest with these words:

Reputation Defender is a new start-up that seeks to commodify internet self-help. According to yesterday’s WashingtonPost article on Xoxohth, the service will destroy harmful content about you wherever it appears on the World Wide Web, presumably through an escalating series of gentle reminders followed by hard nudges against hosts. As I blogged yesterday, the site is trying to make a public good out of this private remedy by “encourag[ing] law schools to adopt a professional conduct code for students.”

As I touched on rather obliquely in this post, ReputationDefender.com is a for profit company that will benefit nicely from the above-referenced WaPo article. Every time there is a robbery in my neighborhood, I receive flyers and phone calls from home alarm companies. I don’t believe that alarm company employees are committing the robberies, but they do not hesitate to exploit them and the fear that they engender. Xoxohth is a board that encourages anonymous commenting, and while I imagine some of the commenters likely are law students, my guess is that some of them are not, and are instead people with other agendas. I make no particular accusation against ReputationDefender, as I have no evidence or reason to believe that anyone associated with this company has participated anonymously in online harassment of law students or anybody else. It is, however, hard not to see that there are financial incentives to do so.

Defamation and privacy laws as currently constituted and enforced offer little in the way of protection from online harassment, so the appeal of services such as those offered by ReputationDefender is understandable. But the examples offered by the market effects of computer anti-virus software (better software begets better viruses) and censorware software (better censorware leads to craftier censorware circumvention) suggest that all that “Internet reputation defense” companies will do is change the nature of the problem, rather than solving it, making a tidy profit in the process. It would be nice to see the government productively address the issue, but I don’t imagine that is likely to happen if the majority of people being victimized are female, and the abuse continues to be characterized as “free speech.”

–Ann Bartow

Update: Lest there be any confusion on this point, I think content posted at AutoAdmit/XOXOHTH is extremely problematic and troubling. It is, as a friend noted, “a disgusting cesspool of infantile morons, sociopaths, and misogynistic freaks.” My point is that it would be better for the government to step in than to have shady for profit”reputation defense”entities attempting to financially exploit women who are already being victimized. I am really uncomfortable with the way that a dodgy for profit entity like Reputation Defender is exploiting the situation for its own ends, like some kind of sordid protection racket – “Nice reputation you got there, shame if something happened to it.”

NB: There isn’t a single woman on Reputation Defender’s “Management Team.”

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1000 Books For Peace Project

Adapted from an e-mail by Prof. Jeremy Levitt:

The purpose of this post is to inform you about a special project that the Program for Human Rights and Global Justice at Florida International University is undertaking to support the reconstruction and development of the Republic of Liberia by providing 1000 books in the areas of American and international law, history, political science, international relations, gender studies and anthropology to the University of Liberia (UL), one of Africa’s oldest universities.

Liberia was founded by the U.S. government and the American Colonization Society, a private association composed primarily of Southern slave owners, in 1822, to re-colonize free blacks in the United States back to Africa because of their active opposition to slavery. In 1847, the free black settlers also known as Americo-Liberians, declared independence from the Society establishing itself as the first independent republic in Africa. Consequently, many Liberians are originally from America, which is why it has been the United States’ most loyal political ally in the Southern Hemisphere.

After fourteen years of brutal Civil War (1989-2003) that claimed 250,000 lives in a pre-war population of 3 million, Liberia is in a horrific situation. Approximately 40% of the combatants were children and approximately 75% of the women in the country were raped during the war. Liberia is one of poorest countries in the world with 85% of the population being illiterate and living on less than a dollar a day. The University of Liberia is mandated to train the next generation of leaders in Liberia and the FIU College of Law’s Program for Human Rights and Global Justice is partnering with the UL to support them in this awesome task by providing 1000 books to help UL serve its burgeoning student population nearing 15,000 students. We are asking universities to assist us in meeting our goal of providing 1000 books to the University of Liberia so that Liberians have the benefit of receiving a holistic educational experience. Any assistance that you can render to this worthy project would be greatly appreciated. All books may be sent to the attention of Professor Jeremy I. Levitt at the address below:

Professor Jeremy Levitt
Florida International University
College of Law
University Park Campus, Rafael Diaz-Balart Hall
Miami, FL 33199

-Via Kathleen Bergin

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Want To Pay $1,200 To Hear A Bunch of Men Pontificate About The Future?

It’s “The New Yorker Conference/2012: stories from the near future” and with only a small fraction of the speakers (three out of twenty-five!) female, it looks like the near future will be as dude-centric as ever. At her blog Heavens to Mergotroyd, Nancy McClernan observed: I’d love to see this question asked during the course of the conference: do the gentlemen (and few ladies) believe that the future, intellectual discourse, and the New Yorker will continue to be totally dominated by males?

UPDATE: Hmmm. The webpage listing the conference participants was down for a while today, and now it is back up with a notice that the list is partial and the program is still “in formation.” This change has resulted in the truncation of the bio of the final currently listed speaker, who happens to be Tim Wu, a law professor I rather like. Huh. Meanhile, inquiring minds are wondering: Will any women be added to the grotesquely androcentric speaker roster? Stay tuned!

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Does The Yahoo Avatar Pictured Below Look “Plus Sized” To You?

beachavatar.jpg

The blogger “One Jewish Dyke” writes that not only is this the largest female avatar available at Yahoo, but that if you choose it, your virtual clothing choices are very limited, which she notes is rather odd, because:

In a regular store it’s hard to be acknowledged as a normal size. The Gap curvy jeans that fit me, but I have to order them specially online because apparently women of my size don’t shop in the store. The LL Bean store carries a few items in petite length, but mostly I have to order anything with a 28-inch inseam through the catalog.

But in a store, makes sense. Space is limited and only the most common sizes, the most likely to sell, will get onto the rack. Or at least it make sense would if the stores were following actual logic. The average American woman wears a size 12/14, but it’s hard to find clothing much above these sizes in most stores in the mall. Apparently only average women and smaller are supposed to shop. There are special stores for women who wear a 14 or larger, and if you want any kind of variety, quality, or uniqueness you have to buy your clothing online. On yahoo avatars, it makes no sense. It’s not like company will waste money, like when clothing goes unpurchased if it is made in sizes that women don’t wear or buy. It’s a freaking drawing. If yahoo can provide hundreds of backgrounds, accessories, and outfits, how much more difficult is it to make those various outfits fit people in sizes other than Demi Moore or Drew Barrymore?

Read the whole post here.

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Please don’t say “vagina”

Via WABC news, Students suspended for saying ‘vagina’:

Three female students at John Jay High School in Cross River [New York] were suspending for saying the word “vagina” during an open mic session, sparking a debate about censorship throughout the community. The students were reading a selection from Eve Ensler’s “The Vagina Monologues.”

Read more at the Reproductive Rights Prof blog.

-Caitlin Borgmann

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“The Abortion Diaries”

From the film’s website:

The Abortion Diaries is a documentary featuring 12 women who speak candidly about their experiences with abortion. The women are doctors, subway workers, artists, activists, military personnel, teachers and students; they are Black, Latina, Jewish and White; they are mothers or child-free; they range in age from 19 to 54. Their stories weave together with the filmmaker’s diary entries to present a compelling, moving and at times surprisingly funny “dinner party” where the audience is invited to hear what women say behind closed doors about motherhood, medical technology, sex, spirituality, love, work and their own bodies.

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The New Hampshire House of Reps voted to repeal a parental notice abortion law

Press Release Direct from NARAL:

Nancy Keenan, president of NARAL Pro-Choice America, praised New Hampshire legislators for voting overwhelmingly to repeal a dangerous parental-involvement mandate that had gone all the way to the Supreme Court.

“Teens in trouble should turn to their parents – and thankfully, most already do,”Keenan said. “However, if for some reason a girl can’t, responsible parents want to be sure – first and foremost – that their daughters are safe. Like most Americans, New Hampshire residents want teen pregnancy prevented, not punished. This law did nothing to protect young people or promote communication between teens and their parents.”

Keenan also noted that the bill’s chief sponsor, state Rep. Elizabeth Hager (R-Concord), serves on the board of directors for NARAL Pro-Choice America. NARAL Pro-Choice New Hampshire worked tirelessly to rally support for the repeal.”We salute Rep. Hager and NARAL Pro-Choice New Hampshire,”Keenan said. “Their leadership made this a huge victory for young women’s health and personal privacy, and paved the way for the legislature to consider commonsense proposals to improve family communication and help prevent unintended pregnancy among teens in a constructive way.”

In January 2006, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a unanimous decision in Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of Northern New England, a case brought by Planned Parenthood against the state of New Hampshire seeking to prohibit the state from enforcing a parental-notification law. The Supreme Court chose not to rule explicitly on either of the significant constitutional questions at issue in the case. Instead, the Court restated its precedent that abortion restrictions must contain an exception to protect women’s health, then decided the case on essentially technical grounds and returned the case to the lower courts to determine whether a narrow injunction could cure the law’s constitutional defect. The lower court stayed the case pending consideration of the repeal bill passed today.

See also.

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Two commercial announcements

makeshift_subscribe_ad_f2.gif

Or don’t subscribe! No pressure either way!

make/shift” is a new feminist magazine. Learn more here. NB: They have offered to send me a free “review” copy of the first issue, and I accepted, which I feel compelled to reveal here.

Second: The comment below appeared in response to this post, but because it is basically an advertisement, I felt uncomfortable about allowing it through moderation. Still, because it may be of interest to some readers, here is the text:

Dear Prof. Bartow,

In light of this posting, we thought your readers might interested to learn about a similar”contest”involving female law students featured in this week’s Washington Post:

Like the law librarians, these law students, who include ReputationDefender clients, did not give permission for their pictures to be used, and in no way invited this unwanted attention. The women whose pictures were misappropriated were also subjected to explicit and even threatening comments that were anonymously posted on a popular law school discussion forum. Once aware of the”contest,”the women requested that the site remove the pictures, and were ignored and publicly mocked. They then turned to ReputationDefender. The site was shut down after we repeatedly effected the removal of the pictures.

Although there is a sense that nothing can be done about these sorts of”contests”(short of perhaps posting unflattering pictures of the bloggers themselves), ReputationDefender is working to empower private individuals who have been unfairly subjected to this type of anonymous and hateful commentary. In particular, we are working to change the sexually harassing culture of the website that hosted the contest through a petition that asks the discussion forum to establish a clear and easy mechanism for resolution of these sorts of complaints and disputes. For more information about our campaign and petition please see:
http://reputationdefender.com/campaign_home.php.

Thanks,

RDBlogger
Reputationdefender.com

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Derrida Papers Controversy Turns Out To Have Sexual Harassment Component

A little over a month ago the Chron reported that the University of California at Irvine was suing the family of Jacques Derrida over the philosopher’s papers. Two weeks later the LA Times reported that U.C. Irvine was dropping its suit. Want to know where the feminist legal issue is? On February 25th the LA Times reported:

When a vampire expert allegedly seduced a tipsy UC Irvine student four years ago, he inadvertently set off a chain of events that now jeopardizes the school’s control of a dead philosopher’s prized archives.

The story came to light after UCI announced last week that it would drop a lawsuit against the widow and sons of philosopher Jacques Derrida, the acclaimed founder of deconstruction, an influential but bewildering theory that questions the concept of absolute truth.

In 1990, Derrida signed an agreement to donate his scholarly papers to UCI, where he taught part time. But after his death in 2004, Derrida’s heirs began questioning the pact. The university tried to negotiate, then sued three months ago, a maneuver that outraged professors in California and beyond.

Buried in the news that UCI would resume negotiations with Derrida’s family was a mysterious footnote: The feud over his archives was sparked by a letter Derrida sent to UCI shortly before his death.

In it, the pipe-puffing Frenchman threatened to pull the plug on the archives because he was furious about “some things the university was doing,” said Peggy Kamuf, a USC professor and Derrida friend.

Kamuf wouldn’t elaborate, but details have slowly emerged. According to multiple sources, Derrida wanted UCI to halt its investigation of a Russian studies professor, Dragan Kujundzic, who was accused of sexually harassing a 25-year-old female doctoral student. So he tried to use his archives as leverage to derail the case, they said.

UCI officials declined to comment on Derrida’s letter or Kujundzic last week. But court records from a lawsuit filed by the doctoral student might fill in some of the gaps.

The 2004 sexual harassment lawsuit contends that Kujundzic, who taught a popular class on vampires and signed his e-mails with a colon to symbolize Dracula bite marks, used his position as the student’s advisor to manipulate her into a series of sexual encounters. …

… The student said she felt coerced to engage in sex or risk having her academic career ruined. UCI’s probe of the affair sided with neither party. Investigator Gwen Thompson concluded the relationship was consensual but said Kujundzic violated a university policy that barred professors from dating students they supervised.

Kujundzic argued that he wasn’t the student’s advisor, an assertion UCI rejected. In mid-2004, university officials began weighing penalties for the Serbian-born professor.

Derrida, who at the time was dying from pancreatic cancer, tried to intervene.

“Toward the end of his life, he enjoyed the same status as Aristotle among the ancients, and every perception of injustice was routed to his desk,” said Avital Ronell, a Derrida protege who teaches at New York University. “Even as he was crawling with fatigue, he put himself in the service of those seeking his help and needing the strength of his prestigious signature.”

UCI was apparently unmoved. On Aug. 31, school officials demoted Kujundzic, reduced his salary, banned him from campus without pay for two quarters and ordered him into sexual-harassment counseling, according to court records.

Kujundzic and the University of California were later sued in Orange County Superior Court by the student, a case that was settled out of court this month for an undisclosed amount.

Derrida’s archives, caught in the crossfire, remain in limbo. Last fall, after negotiations broke off between UCI and Derrida’s heirs, the school sued his family, which lives in France. …

There is a lot going on here, but I guess I should leave readers to [wait for it] deconstruct the matter for themselves. Or, you can see what KC Sheehan has to say about it. See also. Incidentally, if you are wondering what happened to Kudjundzic, he is apparently now on the faculty at the University of Florida.

–Ann Bartow

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Charlotte Perkins Gilman

gilman2.jpg

A writer, economist, and lecturer, Charlotte Perkins Gilman was an early theorist of the feminist movement. According to The Charlotte Perkins Gilman Society:

Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860-1935) was born in New England, a descendent of the prominent and influential Beecher family. Despite the affluence of her most famous ancestors, she was born into poverty. Her father abandoned the family when she was a child, and she received just four years of formal education. At an early age she vowed never to marry, hoping instead to devote her life to public service.

In 1882, however, at the age of twenty-one, she was introduced to Charles Walter Stetson (1858-1911), a Providence, Rhode Island artist, and the two were married in 1884. Charlotte Stetson became pregnant almost immediately after their marriage, gave birth to a daughter, and sunk into a deep depression that lasted for several years.

She eventually entered a sanitarium in Philadelphia to undergo the ìrest cure, a controversial treatment for nervous prostration, which forbade any type of physical activity or intellectual stimulation. After a month, she returned to her husband and child and subsequently suffered a nervous breakdown. In 1888, she left Stetson and moved with her daughter to California, where her recovery was swift.

In the early 1890s, she began writing and lecturing, and in 1892, she published the now-famous story, “The Yellow Wall-Paper.” A volume of poems followed a year later. In 1898, she published her most famous book, Women and Economics. With its publication, and its subsequent translation into seven languages, Gilman earned international acclaim. In 1900, she married her first cousin, Houghton Gilman. Over the next twenty-five years, she wrote and published more than a dozen books.

Some of Gilman’s works are available for free online, including The Yellow Wallpaper and Herland (or Herland or Herland!) because they are no longer in copyright. Remarkably, some of the sites hosting the texts of her public domain works dishonestly claim copyrights in the texts themselves, such as the University of Virginia. Several terrific books about Gilman have been published, including this one by my friend and University of South Carolina colleague Cynthia Davis.

–Ann Bartow

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“Designer Vaginas”

Head on over to the Reproductive Rights Prof Blog and read Feminist Law Prof Catlin Borgmann’s post on this topic!

On a related note, see this post too.

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Deborah Merritt, “Bias, the Brain, and Student Evaluations of Teaching”

The abstract:

Student evaluations of teaching are a common fixture at American law schools, but they harbor surprising biases. Extensive psychology research demonstrates that these assessments respond overwhelmingly to a professor’s appearance and nonverbal behavior; ratings based on just thirty seconds of silent videotape correlate strongly with end-of-semester evaluations. The nonverbal behaviors that influence teaching evaluations are rooted in physiology, culture, and habit, allowing characteristics like race and gender to affect evaluations. The current process of gathering evaluations, moreover, allows social stereotypes to filter students’ perceptions, increasing risks of bias. These distortions are inevitable products of the intuitive, “system one” cognitive processes that the present process taps. The cure for these biases requires schools to design new student evaluation systems, such as ones based on facilitated group discussion, that enable more reflective, deliberative judgments. This article draws upon research in cognitive decision making, both to present the compelling case for reforming the current system of evaluating classroom performance and to illuminate the cognitive processes that underlie many facets of the legal system.

The paper is downloadable here.

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Upcoming Conference: Constituting Equality: Comparative Constitutional Law and Gender Equality

Constituting Equality: Comparative Constitutional Law and Gender Equality at the Indiana University School of Law–Bloomington on March 23 and 24, 2007

Interest in comparative constitutional law has exploded in recent years, but the burgeoning field has paid little attention to issues of gender equality. This international conference will highlight the broad range of constitutional mechanisms for promoting gender equality in nations around the world. Our approach is conceptual rather than geographical, focusing on the thematic issues facing both existing constitutions and those on the drafting table.

Panels will address:

  • the impact of constitutional protection for customary and religious law on gender equality;
  • building gender into the structure of government through electoral gender quotas or women’s commissions;
  • substantive constitutional rights of particular concern to women, such as reproductive rights;
  • constitutional incorporation of international law on gender equality;
  • and the role of women in the process of constitution-making.

The conference brings together participants from five continents and a wide range of professional experiences, including activists as well as academics from several disciplines. Our goal is to achieve a greater understanding of the promise and pitfalls of constitutional mechanisms for promoting gender equality under different conditions.

For more information, see our webpage or contact Susan Williams at shwillia@indiana.edu

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We Are All Porn Search Engine Optimizers Now

When people end their blogs, pornographers and others often take over the blog’s URL. Bloggers who don’t keep their blogrolls updated may inadvertently be linking to, and increasing the search engine rank of, porn sites. This blog doesn’t have a traditional blogroll, so that isn’t a problem here. What is still an issue, though, is that when bloggers comment here and leave “hot links” to their names, the links remain functional even when the URL changes hands. This means that even blogs without blogrolls may be unintentionally linking to, and therefore assisting, pornography sites. You can read one account of this phenomenon here. Linking to porn sites should be a conscious choice, not something that is stealthy inflicted upon us.

–Ann Bartow

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Medical Privacy, or Lack Thereof, and Profits

Deborah Peel, MD writes in an e-mail that is quoted here with permission:

Fortune Magazine lauds one of the nation’s largest data miners of medical records, without any awareness that one major reason for the corporation’s success (revenue of $88 billion/year) is the illegal and unethical use of Americans’ medical and prescription records.

Yes, they ‘wire the world’, but McKesson does so by ignoring strong state and federal laws and 2,400 years of medical ethics that require informed patient consent before medical records can be used, disclosed, or sold. Stronger state laws and medical ethics are supposed to trump the HIPAA Privacy Rule, which was intended to provide a ‘floor’ for privacy protections, not become the ‘ceiling’ for privacy. Instead, McKesson and the IT industry are ignoring state laws and medical ethics, because the unconscionable profits from selling medical data are irresistible.

McKesson’s CIO said,”So along with those records needs to travel the access rights that the patient grants for use of those records. Will someone ever view a medical record that perhaps they shouldn’t have? They probably will, but in an electronic world we’ll know that it happened. We’ll know who did it, which is far superior to a chart lying around on a nurse’s station for anybody to walk by and glance at.”

The CIO is wrong. Patients will never know who saw their records that shouldn’t have because: 1) audit trails are NOT required under HIPAA for routine uses and 2) under HIPAA virtually all of the users patients would not want to access their records have federal”regulatory permission”to use them without consent or notice. Further, patients are NOT granting”access rights”to their medical records.”Access rights”are otherwise known as the right of consent, which HIPAA eliminated in 2002.

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“Hymen Fatwa”

There is a lot to ponder in this article about the approval of reconstructive hyman surgery by a high ranking Egyptian religious figure that appeared in the Daily Star Egypt. On the one hand, it’s hard not to cheer a statement like: “Any man who is concerned about his prospective wife’s hymen should first provide a proof that he himself is virgin.” On the other hand, endorsing and encouraging the practice of reconstructive hyman surgery seems deeply problematic. One more enthusiastic reaction can be read here.

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“Mental health courts have the potential to save taxpayers money”

That’s the title of this article, which I really like, except for the title and portions that focus on “saving taxpayers money,” as if that was the most important aspect of treating people with mental illnesses in a just and decent way. Anyway, below is a short excerpt:

Mental health courts that sentence people with mental illness who are convicted of misdemeanors and low-level felonies to treatment instead of jail have the potential to save taxpayers money, according to a RAND Corporation study conducted for the Council of State Governments Justice Center.

“Justice, Treatment, and Cost: An Evaluation of the Fiscal Impact of Allegheny County Mental Health Court,” was funded by the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare and the Staunton Farm Foundation. The study issued today by RAND, a nonprofit research organization, is the first to look at the fiscal impact of a mental health court anywhere in the United States.

“This study examined the Allegheny County Mental Health Court in Pittsburgh, but the findings are likely applicable to many of the other approximately 120 mental health courts around the United States,” said M. Susan Ridgely, the lead researcher on the report and an attorney.

The goals of the mental health courts are to link individuals convicted of non-violent crimes to community-based treatment for mental illness, alcoholism and drug addiction when appropriate in order to reduce their jail time and to get them the help they need to reduce the chance they will commit new crimes. …

Read the whole thing here. You can access the study it is describing here. A summary of the study is accessible here. Via The Trouble With Spikol.

–Ann Bartow

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Welcome to the Blogosphere, IntLawGrrls!

Welcome to the blogosphere, IntLawGrrls.   In a widely-distributed email, Professor Diane Amman (UC Davis) announced the group blog:

[W]e hope that that this  newest entry to the blogosphere will add new voices to discussion on matters of global import — not only overarching questions of war and peace, but also  less-noted events, such as  detention of children and unionization efforts in the developing world.   You are most welcome to join our project….[O]nly women will be primary bloggers, [but] we welcome men’s visits and comment posts.  

Regularly-scheduled contributors to the IntLawGrrls blog include Jaya Ramji-Nogales (Beasley School of Law at Temple University), Elizabeth Lutes Hillman (Rutgers School of Law-Camden), Elena A. Baylis (University of Pittsburgh School of Law), Hari Osofsky  (University of Oregon School of Law), Naomi Norberg (PhD candidate in comparative law, Université de Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne)), Karen E. Bravo  (Indiana University School of Law, Indianapolis), Diane Marie Amann (University of California, Davis, School of Law), Hélène Ruiz Fabri, Université de Paris  I (Panthéon-Sorbonne).   This is a great group of scholars; the blog will be one to watch.

Three aspects of the blog are particularly curious.   First, the blog’s name appears to be a nod (at least in part) to the “Riot Grrrl” movement of the 1990’s.   But why would a group of adult professional women, mostly law professors, choose to call themselves “grrls”?   Is this one of those Foucauldian reverse discourse/reclaiming moves?   If so, I’m not sure it works.  

Second, as Professor Amman announces above, men are not welcome as “primary bloggers.”   There are convincing cases to be made for female-controlled or female-only space, but I’m not sure that IntLawGrrls have made one.  

Third, the “primary bloggers” have adopted as semi-pseudonyms “names of foremothers in the hope they will inspire crisp yet care-full commentary, delivered at times with a dash of sass.”   The blog’s “Voices” section lists each author’s real name and professional affiliation.   Writing as Mata Hari, Professor Hari Osofsky (University of Oregon School of Law) says, “Rather than essentializing either our foremothers or the current generation of intlawgrrls, the blog simply includes us.”   Huh?  

-Bridget Crawford

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The U.N.’s CSW: “Women, violence and empowerment: the world we live in”

That’s the title of this terrific post by Patricia Daniel at openDemocracy. Below is a short excerpt:

… The [Commission on the Status of Women, a.k.a. CSW] is a United Nations body, consisting of forty-five members appointed on a four-year term, which reviews the world’s progress towards the elimination of discrimination against women. The fact that this annual event is now in its fifty-first session is sufficient indication that the UN’s goal here has not yet been achieved.

The Convention for the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination against Women (Cedaw) was adopted by the UN in 1979 and has been ratified by 182 member-states. Countries that have ratified or acceded to the convention are legally bound to put its provisions into practice and to report regularly on implementation, receiving comments from the Cedaw committee on what further national action should be taken.

So what’s going on?

There are multiple sources and statistics to demonstrate the scale of the problems still to be addressed. The United Nations Development Programme annually publishes a Gender and Development Index (GDI) and Gender Empowerment Measure (GEM) for 175 countries. In Britain, the Equal Opportunities Commission provides annual reports on gender equality.

The World Economic Forum, at its own annual Davos conference in 2007, launched its own gender report based on a new tool that focuses on the relative size of the gender gap rather than levels of women’s empowerment and access. …

Read the entire post here. OpenDemocracy also has a blog specifically dedicated to the CSW: WomenUNlimited.

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Women’s Studies at the University of South Carolina

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The last two days have been taken up with the wonderful Annual Women’s Studies Conference here at the University of South Carolina. I’m a WOST Affiliate Faculty Member, have been since the moment I got here, and the WOST program has been a real lifeline in so many ways.

Our Women’s Studies program is extremely multidisciplinary, and the WOST Conference was, as it always is, a fantastic reminder about the depth and brilliance of the feminist cohort of the University of South Carolina faculty and students. See e.g. this. If you are one of those anti-Southern bigots who ignores anything not produced by scholars at traditionally elite universities, you are seriously missing out. South Carolina, the state, is not the most hospitable environment for academic feminists, but the people who come here and stay here at this University are among the smartest, most committed, and hardest-working folks you will ever meet. Remarkable papers were presented by feminist scholars ranging from octogenarian emeritus faculty, to smart and motivated undergraduate students. I was very proud to be on a panel that also featured one of my law school’s exceptional students, as well as a retired faculty member who attended college with (she was at Radcliffe, he was at Harvard), and remains friendly with, Justice Souter. The session was moderated by a biology prof colleague who grew up in Bombay, India, and I had a great time telling her about my trip to Hyderabad last December. To say I had a great day doesn’t even begin to express how much I enjoyed the 2007 WOST Conference experience.

As is typical for Women’s Studies functions, there were myriad accolades, gifts and flowers, lots of great food, and many, many full body hugs. The WOST Program Coordinator, Rosa Thorn, is retiring, and we are going to miss her something awful. An African American woman who attended segregated public schools here in SC while growing up, Rosa won University awards for her exceptional organizational skills, and many friends and fans via her exceptional kindness and generosity. She has been almost scarily dedicated to her job, and had she been born 25 years later than she was, she might well be running a less rapacious (and quite possibly even more profitable) version of Microsoft.

Our University President, Andrew Sorensen, was in attendance, and not just for “face time” either, he stayed for the substantive presentations as well. His Presidency has been notable for a marked increase in the number of female faculty and administrators who have been hired and/or tenured at this University, and he and Provost Mark Becker deserve a lot of credit for that.

The WOST Direct, Lynn Weber, is stepping down, because after eleven years she wants to return to teaching and writing full time. She’s been a terrific administrator, and an awesome mentor and friend. If the next WOST Director is even half as good the program will remain top notch. I also need to mention, with a lot of affection, the Associate WOST Director, my friend and neighbor Laura Woliver, who will be stepping down from her administrative slot next year, unfortunately, though she is certainly entitled. Laura is quite possibly the nicest person walking the face of the earth, and because she is so very sweet, warm and supportive, sometimes people underestimate her fierce intellect. Too bad for them. Read one of her books (maybe this one?) and you will see what I mean.

Finally, I need to mention Helen Hill, the Columbia, SC native filmmaker daughter of two of my WOST colleagues, Kevin and Becky Lewis, who was murdered on January 4th, in New Orleans. She and her family survived Katrina, but not its violent aftermath. The WOST Conference ended with a sad but inspirational memorial showing of a number of her short films. She will not be forgotten:

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“Helen’s funeral had not one but two brass bands.”
Here are some words about Helen’s funeral, from another blog:

Helen’s brother Jake was visiting from New York. He served as the grand marshal. Later, I overheard him say that he’s”not angry at the city of New Orleans.”That’s a comforting sentiment, to be sure, and I am grateful he expressed it.

For my part, as a resident of the city, I am angry at New Orleans : and I count myself in that number. I am angry and ashamed of what we did to Helen. We seduced her here with our charms, and we killed her with our violence. How can we be so cruel?

But on days like yesterday, I am also proud of New Orleans, and the culture that Helen loved so much.

I didn’t know Helen, but I sure wish I had. Her parents have always been very kind to me, and I hope at least I can return that favor.

–Ann Bartow

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National Procreation-referencing Radio

Here’s the blurb to a story entitled “A Really Hot Potato” that was on NPR’s Morning Edition today:

A grandmother in Italy bought a sack of potatoes at her local market. Before cooking them, she washed them, only to find that one of the “potatoes” was a cone-shaped live grenade, minus the pin. Authorities believe it was a World War II leftover plucked from fields in France.

The grenade finder’s name is never mentioned. Why exactly is her status as “a grandmother” her defining newsworthy characteristic?

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New Issue of The Scholar and Feminist Online: “Jewish Women Changing America: Cross-Generational Conversations”

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Read more about this issue here or access the issue index here. Below is an excerpt from the editor’s overview:

This issue of Scholar and Feminist Online began with an insight: the growing realization of the importance of Jewish women in the history of feminism in the United States. When it comes to improving women’s lives, in many instances it is Jewish women who are changing America.

This insight is now coming to fore of scholarship on American feminism, as scholars reflect back on many decades of change, and particularly on the founders of what is generally called the “second wave” of American feminism, which began in the 1960s and continued through the twentieth century. Even in the first wave of activism, running roughly from the mid-nineteenth century through the suffrage movement of the 1920s Jewish women were not absent. Ernestine Rose, a Jewish immigrant from Poland and political activist, is generally credited as being one of the first women to speak in public to “mixed” audiences of both men and women in the United States. By the late 1960s and early 1970s, however, the role of Jewish women in U.S. feminism is unmistakable with leaders like those named by Letty Cottin Pogrebin at the conference as “Betty Friedan, Bella Abzug, [and] Gloria Steinem”. …

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Justice Thomas and the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003

As I’m prepping to teach the commerce clause in a couple of weeks and re-reading the cases, I’m struck by how virtually impossible it will be for Justice Thomas to remain consistent to his past opinions and uphold the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003 that is presently before the Court.

In the recent commerce clause cases, all of the Justices have agreed with the substantial effects test for interstate commerce (disagreeing over, among other things, the economic activity requirement) . . . except Thomas. He goes much further and disagrees with that test and the aggregation principle as well. His writing in these cases makes it hard to imagine how he could be consistent and uphold Congress’ right to pass this (or any, for that matter) restriction on abortion. A couple of choice examples:

From Printz: In my “revisionist” view, the Federal Government’s authority under the Commerce Clause, which merely allocates to Congress the power “to regulate Commerce … among the several States,” does not extend to the regulation of wholly intra state, point-of-sale transactions.

From Lopez: [favorably describing Gibbons] At the same time, the Court took great pains to make clear that Congress could not regulate commerce “which is completely internal, which is carried on between man and man in a State, or between different parts of the same State, and which does not extend to or affect other States.” Moreover, while suggesting that the Constitution might not permit States to regulate interstate or foreign commerce, the Court observed that “[i]nspection laws, quarantine laws, health laws of every description, as well as laws for regulating the internal commerce of a State” were but a small part “of that immense mass of legislation … not surrendered to a general government.” (emphasis added)

Physicians who perform the procedure are engaging in “wholly intra state, point-of-sale transactions” regarding procedures prohibited by a federal “health law[].”

The federal law does have a “jurisdictional hook,” applying only to physicians “who, in or affecting interstate or foreign commerce,” perform the forbidden procedure. But, that won’t save the statute for Thomas (or really for the others since they require a “substantial” effect), as the quotes above show.

It’s dangerous to rely on Justices being exactingly principled in an area as contentious as abortion, but if there’s anyone who might fit that bill, it’s Justice Thomas and his obsession with restoring the commerce clause to his conception of its original meaning. So, maybe he‘ll provide the fifth vote to strike down the law and we won’t have to worry about Roberts or Alito replacing O’Connor’s vote? Or can anyone point out how he can remain true to his past writing on the commerce clause and uphold this law?

– David S. Cohen

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In Which The Internets Provide A Good Laugh

Via this post from a blog called: You Knit What?? Seriously. What the hell were you thinking? I’m tempted to copy the whole thing and repost it here, but in deference to the blogger’s ad revenue, let me just encourage you to click the handy link.

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The Creepy Misogyny of NYT Restaurant Critic Frank Bruni

Today’s NYT features a review by “Frank Bruni” of the restaurant at the Penthouse Executive club entitled: “Where Only the Salad Is Properly Dressed.” He claims to like the steak there, but the entire article is a platform for his sexist comedic stylings, such as lines like this:

The men who actually wait on the tables are less attentive and personable than the women who hover around them (and, it should be noted, vanish quickly if shooed away). The prices of some dishes, pumped up to reflect the entertainment on hand, might also be called topless.

And this:

Meet Foxy. When I visited Robert’s on Valentine’s Day in a mixed-gender group (not all that unusual at the restaurant), she approached our table to hawk neck and shoulder massages, also $20 apiece.

“Foxy,”I began, then stopped myself, wondering if I was being too familiar.”Are you and I on a first-name basis, or should I address you as Ms. Foxy?”

“You can call me Dr. Foxy,”she said.

“Is that an M.D. or a Ph.D.?”

“Yes,”she answered.

The doctor coated her hands with moisturizer and, less seductively, antibacterial gel. She knows how to make a guy feel special.

The guy in question was one of my companions, whose collar she had already spread so she could get at his skin. She told us that she used to work at Scores, a disclosure that raised an interesting question. Is there a strip club arc of professional advancement, with the Hooters overachievers graduating to Scores and the Scores valedictorians to the Penthouse Executive Club?

And what’s after that? A cameo on Howard Stern’s show?

But it was in captioning the accompanying photographic slide show entitled “Two Kinds of Flesh” that Bruni reveals his true opinions of women who work at the restaurant. Here are a few examples:

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Bruni caption: “SHE NEEDS A STEAK . . . OR A SWEATER A dancer at the Penthouse Executive Club.”

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Bruni caption: “Here’s the possibly perfect meal at Robert’s: a porterhouse, rare or medium-rare by the looks of it, with the fat, crunchy onion rings. Look at that meat. On the plate, I mean. You can see how nicely charred it is on the outside, how soft and red within. It takes an impressive steak to rivet a photographer’s attention from the scene to the cuisine. This one succeeded.”

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Bruni caption: “What I really want to do is direct.”

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Bruni caption: “A scene from the Penthouse Executive Club, a casting call for the sequel to “Showgirls” or Britney’s latest night on the town? You decide.”

Yet another reason to be a vegetarian.

–Ann Bartow

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Former Police Officer Avoids Punishment For Stalking and Harassment by Promising to Join Military

The LA Times reports:

By promising to join the military, a former Long Island police officer avoided jail time and probation Monday for hacking into his ex-girlfriend’s online dating account and setting up dates for her with men she didn’t know.

Michael Valentine, 29, was charged in April with 197 counts, including stalking, computer tampering and harassment. He pleaded guilty in June to two misdemeanor charges of unauthorized use of a computer.

Prosecutors said Valentine sought revenge against a former girlfriend by logging into her Match.com account, assuming her identity and contacting 70 men. Some of the men showed up at the woman’s house for dates arranged by Valentine.

Prosecutors agreed to the deal because Valentine said he intended to join the military. If he does not enlist within nine months, he will be sentenced to three years’ probation.

No word on how the victim feels about this, or whether Valentine will receive counseling before he is issued weapons and assumes responsibility for the safety and well-being of others in potentially stressful environments. Via Sivacracy.

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Symbolic Moratorium in NYC

The New York City Council is scheduled to vote Wednesday on”a symbolic moratorium on the use of the n-word in New York City.”  

New York Times coverage is here.   Columnist Clyde Haberman observes:

“[M]oratorium”is arguably an odd word in this context.   Apparently, the lawmakers bent over backward to avoid highly charged words like”ban”and”abolition.”   But by definition, a moratorium is a temporary state.   Are we to believe that at some point the dread word might acquire respectability? … Another question is how confident New Yorkers can be that the Council will stop at symbolic statements.

-Bridget Crawford

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This May Distract You From Research

Yesterday’s TaxProf Blog linked to this “Advice for New Faculty” from Harvard Economics Professor Greg Mankiw:

Avoid activities that will distract you from research. Whatever you do, do not start a blog. That will only establish your lack of seriousness as a scholar.

Professor Jim Maule (Villanova) had this to say via the Tax Prof listserv (reprinted with permission):

When will those who have captured law schools and turned them into student-financed think tanks come to their senses and realize that blogging, writing practice-oriented materials, subscribing to practitioner lists in areas in which they teach, and matching their areas of writing with their areas of interest do far more for the success of law school graduates than the overhyped determination to out-Harvard Harvard or to move up one or a few spots in someone’s rankings?

Both Mankiw and Maule have their own blogs (Greg Mankiw’s Blog and mauledagain, respectively). Perhaps Mankiw intended to limit his advice to Economics faculty members. How does Mankiw fare under his own analysis (or does tenure bring gravitas to blogging)? At least in the legal academy, Maule has it right, in my view.

-Bridget Crawford

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From The Department of Rhetorical Questions: How Come Women’s Clothing Is So Much More Important Than Men’s?

Most of Oscars Best Dressed and all of Oscars Worst Dressed are women. Anyone doubt that any female nominee who tried to camouflage herself in a tuxedo like the men below would have found herself on the Worst Dressed list?

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