Nobel Winner Shirin Ebadi on Bombs and Exploitive Sex Work

From Reuters via the WaPo:

Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi said on Saturday nations with nuclear capabilities should spend money to stop exploitation of women instead of making bombs.

The lawyer, in India to promote women’s rights, said governments often said they lacked the funds to improve women’s lives, but added that they had no financial constraints when it came to manufacturing nuclear bombs.

“I think no country needs bombs — not India, Pakistan, Iran, America or Israel,” Ebadi said through a translator at a news conference in New Delhi. Ebadi, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003, said poverty was the main reason why women became sex workers and that no one would sell their body for the pleasure of others unless they were in dire financial need.

She said that although prostitution was illegal in many countries, authorities often favored the client rather than trying to understand the plight of the woman.

Ebadi said in an interview with a French newspaper on Friday that the world’s focus on Tehran’s nuclear program was overshadowing human rights abuses there.

Via The Dees Diversion.

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Eric Keroack

Think the Bush Administration is going to tame its extremism in this lame duck period or over the next two years? Think again, at least with respect to its policies on women.

Earlier this month, Bush appointed Eric Keroack to head family planning programs at the Department of Health and Human Services. What’s so extreme about Keroack? Everything:

Before his appointment, Dr. Keroack served as the medical director of A Woman’s Concern, a network of pregnancy counseling clinics across Massachusetts whose method of trying to dissuade women from having an abortion includes spreading the scary and medically inaccurate myth that having an abortion steeply increases the risk of breast cancer. The group also has a policy against dispensing contraception even to married women. It has stated on its Web site that the distribution of contraceptive drugs or devices is”demeaning to women, degrading of human sexuality and adverse to human health and happiness.”Dr. Keroack now claims that he disagrees with these approaches, a repositioning that seems very belated.

When speaking at abstinence conferences across the country, and in his writings, Dr. Keroack has promoted the novel argument that sex with multiple partners alters brain chemistry in a way that makes it harder for women to form bonding relationships. One of the researchers cited by Dr. Keroack has called the claim”complete pseudoscience”unsupported by her findings.

That’s from this editorial from the New York Times calling the appointment a “farce.” I call it more harm for women and women’s health.

– David S. Cohen

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Lawyers at Their Desks

About two dozen readers contacted the paper to complain about this custom-tailored suit advertisement, which appeared in Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly.  This clothing ad ran in Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly with the caption, “A custom-tailored suit is a natural aphrodisiac.”    Several  readers have complained that the ad portrays women in a negative light,  reports a Boston Globe article.   In a letter to Mass Lawyers Weekly, the President of the (Massachusetts) Women’s Bar Association objected to the ad, saying that “[a]s lawyers, we are obligated to fight against gender discrimination, in whatever form it may take.”   Over at slate.com, Dahlia Lithwick asks:

[C]an someone please explain what it is about this particular ad that “demeans women” and undermines our success in the workplace? Can someone help me understand why the president of the Women’s Bar Association wrote in to the publication in question, calling this ad a form of “gender discrimination”? Am I supposed to be outraged about the fact that this nearly naked woman is using her near nakedness to seduce a colleague (a trick that goes back to the first fig leaf, I believe) or that a clothing company is using the promise of uncontrollable, spontaneous workplace sex to seduce clients (a trick that goes back to the first Fig Leaf Emporium)?

Lithwick’s  full Slate article is available here.   Perhaps the Women’s Bar Association  shouldn’t throw stones too quickly or too hard.   Its website  features a slideshow of photos — many captioned “scent-sational women attorneys”  — from a  recent membership event held at a store that sells “natural perfume and cologne.”   Seems to me that the Women’s Bar Association relies on stereotypes, too.  

-Posted by Bridget Crawford

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Make Sure Your Breasts Are Securely Stowed

 Last week the Associated Press  reported that a women was removed from a Delta Airlines flight for breastfeeding her child:

A commuter airline has disciplined a flight attendant who ordered a passenger off a plane for refusing to cover herself with a blanket while breast-feeding her toddler…. Emily Gillette, of Santa Fe, N.M. … said she was breast-feeding her 22-month-old daughter in a window seat in the next-to-last row, with no part of her breast showing and her husband between her and the aisle.   The flight attendant tried to hand her a blanket and told her to cover up, Gillette said.   She declined, telling the flight attendant she had a legal right to nurse her daughter.   Breast-feeding is protected under state law.

The full AP story, available  here, reports that Gillette has  lodged a formal  complaint with the Vermont Human Rights Commission.   The Washington Post carried a related story that at least 30 “nurse-ins” have been staged at airports across the country to protest the actions of the Delta Air Lines flight attendant.

Delta has a dedicated customer service email address, “[f]or whatever your needs may be,”  according to the company’s website.  

-Posted by Bridget Crawford  

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Raeder on Domestic Violence in Federal Court: Abused Women as Victims, Survivors and Offenders

Feminist Law Prof Myrna Raeder has posted to ssrn her article, “Domestic Violence in Federal Court: Abused Women as Victims, Survivors and Offenders.”   Here is a portion of the abstract:

While domestic violence is typically thought of as a state crime, this article discusses domestic violence related prosecutions in federal court. Four federal crimes are studied: interstate domestic violence, interstate travel to violate a restraining order, and two possession of weapon offenses committed by individuals who are either subject to a qualifying restraining order or have been convicted of a qualifying domestic violence misdemeanor. The article … describes the various ways in which domestic violence impacts women who are prosecuted in federal court for a variety of crimes, and argues that domestic violence should be taken into account when a female offender is sentenced for a crime that relates to her history of abuse.

The full article is available here.

-Posted by Bridget Crawford

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When Will It Stop?

Today’s New York Times reports that the bodies of four women were found in a ditch outside Atlantic City:

None of them were wearing shoes or socks. Each was discovered face down in several inches of water, head tilted slightly to the east. At least one had been strangled.

Aside from those chilling details, the authorities here said on Tuesday that they did not know how the bodies of four unidentified women ended up in a drainage ditch behind a row of squalid motels in the shadow of Atlantic City’s glittering lights…..

The Atlantic County prosecutor, Jeffrey S. Blitz, said … that one woman, identified by fingerprints and photographs as Kim Raffo, 35 …. Her current boyfriend, Charles Coles, said Ms. Raffo … worked as a prostitute.  “It hurt her and broke her down,”he said.”She was trying to get her life together to get her kids back.”  

The full NYT article is available here.

-Posted by Bridget Crawford

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More Anti-Fuggery

I’ve made no secret of my contempt for Go Fug Yourself, and today I experienced a fresh resurgence of loathing. Here are just a few of the choice comments that site has recently had for actor Lindsay Lohan:

… We’ve been pretty patient with Lindsay Lohan lately. She’s allegedly been trying to get it together, albeit with a few missteps and a crotch flash, and we were totally encouraged by the news that she was both dating an alleged clean-living advocate and had a screaming match with her no-good self-involved slag heap of a mother — not that we advocate screaming at mothers, but since Dina has firmly and unhealthily (for her child) entrenched herself in the “boozy sorority sister” category rather than the “parent” one, we feel little remorse. And so word of their little spat gave us a reason to hope that maybe, maybe, Lindsay was going to shake off Dina’s evil talons and get some ACTUAL advice and help from someone with ACTUAL maternal impulses and ACTUAL sense. (It’s a crying shame when we feel more motherly toward her than most other people.)

But then, poor Lindsay had her little breakup hissyfit/makeup sex with Harry Morton, and it turns out she’s just as unstable and co-dependent as ever. …

…. It’s bad enough that she is wearing leggings, and indeed, leggings that are wholly exposed. But the real problem is that she’s dragging Queen into her bloated abyss of dysfunction. Do NOT besmirch Queen with your ill-fitting, off-the-shoulder, faux-pants-loving fashion crimes, Lindsay!

Or from this post, verbiage ostensibly direct at Lohan’s mother Dina:

Look into her face, Dina. Again, I wish this were just one bad photo, but they’re all like this. Do you not see? How are you letting this happen? You’re very clearly around her a lot, and you have a reputation for liking to club and schmooze through The Scene almost as much as your child does, so you can’t plead ignorance of all the temptations. You know. And, I’m not insisting she’s skiing down a mountain of fresh white Colombian snow or anything, but… LOOK AT HER. I’m not kidding, hag. Something’s either missing or overmedicated or has been beaten into submission, and not for nothing, she was parading around with Kate Moss recently like they’d been surgically conjoined.

Even if her recent inability to look sober or cognizant in photographs is a bit startling, Dina, it’s still not surprising given that for years now we’ve watched her turn into an undirected party girl. …

Okay, so the site is making rude and insulting personal attacks on Lindsay Lohan, what else is new? Well, one thing that is new are reports that she may have attempted suicide. How hilarious, huh? It’s not like she’s human or anything, right?   Via The Trouble With Spikol.

–Ann Bartow

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O.J. Simpson Book Cancelled

NYT story here which notes:

Faced with a growing uproar, Rupert Murdoch, the chairman the News Corporation, announced this afternoon that his company had canceled publication of the pseudo-memoir/confessional by O.J. Simpson,”If I Did It,”as well as a related television special that was to be broadcast on the Fox network next week.

“I and senior management agree with the American public that this was an ill-considered project,”Mr. Murdoch said in a statement.”We are sorry for any pain this has caused the families of Ron Goldman and Nicole Brown-Simpson.”

Mr. Simpson was accused of the 1994 stabbing murders of his wife Nicole and her friend Ronald L. Goldman. After a televised trial watched by millions around the world, a jury acquitted Mr. Simpson, who had always maintained his innocence. But in the unorthodox literary project, and the accompanying television special, Mr. Simpson reportedly details how he might have killed Ms. Simpson and Mr. Goldman, if he had killed them.

His book editor, Judith Regan, who also conducted an interview of Mr. Simpson for the television special, has said the book is Mr. Simpson’s confession to the murders of Ms. Simpson and Mr. Goldman. Mr. Simpson has not spoken publicly about the book or the TV special.

This replaces a post noting Roxanne at Rox Populi and Amanda at Pandagon had initiated a letter-writing campaign to Judith Regan, urging her to donate the proceeds of the book to domestic violence organizations, which was a great idea.

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Women Sold Out For Political Gain in Nicaragua

Nicaragua Eliminates Last Exception to Strict Anti-Abortion Law:

… Abortion has been illegal in Nicaragua for more than a century, and most women who decide to end unwanted pregnancies seek procedures at underground clinics. But the new law strikes out a clause that made it possible for a woman to obtain an abortion legally when three doctors certified that unless she did, her own life would be in danger.

“For months, the proposed law has drawn fierce criticism from several local women’s groups, the country’s association of gynecologists, the United Nations, the World Health Organization and Human Rights Watch, among others.

“This is a throwback to the Middle Ages for women’s rights,”Juana Jiménez, the leader of the Women’s Autonomous Movement in Nicaragua, said after the law was passed.

“The law was the fruit of the recent presidential election, as conservatives saw a chance to gain its passage in Parliament during the election season. The country is 85 percent Roman Catholic, with most other voters belonging to conservative evangelical churches. Four of the five presidential candidates supported it.

Daniel Ortega, the former Marxist who was president from 1985 to 1990 and the leader of the Sandinista Party, abandoned his ideological roots and supported passage of the law in an effort to gain support from the Roman Catholic Church in his campaign to regain the presidency. He narrowly won the election, on Nov. 5, with about 38 percent of the vote.

The support of the Sandinistas in the National Assembly was critical, because they had blocked similar measures in the past. The bill passed on Oct. 26. …

See also this post.

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Not Exactly A Model of Clarity

I generally like the jurisprudence of Justice Breyer, because I often agree with his views of the law, and really, how could I not like a Supreme Court Justice who used to be a copyright law teaching law professor?   But this pithy and obscure concurrence in Gratz v. Bollinger is hardly his finest work:

I concur in the judgment of the Court though I do not join its opinion. I join Justice O’Connor’s opinion except insofar as it joins that of the Court. I join Part I of Justice Ginsburg’s dissenting opinion, but I do not dissent from the Court’s reversal of the District Court’s decision. I agree with Justice Ginsburg that, in implementing the Constitution’s equality instruction, government decisionmakers may properly distinguish between policies of inclusion and exclusion, post, at 4, for the former are more likely to prove consistent with the basic constitutional obligation that the law respect each individual equally, see U.S. Const., Amdt. 14.

–Ann Bartow, via like a fish needs a bicycle…

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Bloggish Overview of Feminist Legal Theory

Introduction: A while back Larry Solum asked me to write a short post about feminist legal theory for his excellent Legal Theory Blog. What follows is a brief (though longer than it probably should be) overview of this scholarly subject area. With two exceptions, I don’t mention any feminist legal theorists by name, but at the very end there are links to several feminist legal theory bibliographies. This is posted in slightly different form as part of Larry’s Legal Theory Lexicon.

Most feminist legal theory starts, at least implicitly, with the belief that women are not treated the same as men are by the law or by legal actors. Women should be treated equally to men because we really are not very different, in terms of our hopes and dreams and desires and abilities. Women are in some ways different from men, but those differences are not weaknesses or deficiencies, and when the law accounts for them correctly, this promotes broadly accepted notions of justice and equality.

In her book”The Second Sex,”feminist philosopher Simone de Beauvoir explained the concept of”woman as other,”writing that“humanity is male and man defines woman not in herself but as relative to him; she is not regarded as an autonomous being.”Feminist legal theory acknowledges the”otherness”of women by recognizing that laws are made, interpreted and enforced by men, and for men. When the justicial interests of women and men are conterminous and congruent, that isn’t problematic for women, but when they are not, it is. Feminist legal theory seeks to identify ways in which the legal system treats women less favorably than men, and to recommend remedial legal reforms.

Subject Areas: The most important writings and practical applications of feminist legal theory have primarily occurred in the family law, criminal law, reproductive rights, and employment law arenas. These areas of the law tend to have the most immediate and extensive relationships to the general population of women. Important theoretical feminist work has also been done in legal disciplines such as property law, tax law, and corporate law. Eventually there will be multiple feminist critiques of every legal subject area.

Four Analytic Approaches: Equality, Difference, Dominance, and Intersectionality: To prevent this from becoming The Never Ending Feminist Legal Theory Blogpost, I’m going to greatly oversimplify a very rich and diverse field by breaking feminist legal critiques down into four categories. I warn the reader that while the categories are defined quite broadly, they still probably fail to capture important strains of feminist legal thought. None of these categorical approaches is mutually exclusive, but there are times when independently applying various approaches to a particular issue will lead to oppositional outcomes.

1. Equal Treatment: The first category of feminist legal theory concerns itself with equality. It attacks laws that explicitly treat women differently than men, and recommends laws that promulgate change in social policies or practices that put women in inferior positions. Examples:”Equal pay for equal work”was a very powerful rallying cry when women with identical skills and responsibilities were paid less than identically situated men, and laws like the Equal Pay Act of 1963 made a tremendous positive impact on the lives of working women. Reflecting on far more ancient history, feminist legal scholars know that women were not”given”the right to vote, they had to fight very hard for passage of the Nineteenth Amendment, which states in pertinent part: “The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.” Attaining the right to own property was also an important”equality”triumph, and in some ways a battle that is still being fought, as women are still discriminated against by landlords, by mortgage lenders, and in myriad other ways that affect our ability to acquire and possess property so that we can live independently. Future equality battles will likely address issues like the status of women in the military, and practices in the medical and insurance industries.

2. Recognition of Difference: The second category of feminist legal theory addresses ways in which the legal system intersects with cognizable differences (both biological and socially constructed) between women and men.”Difference”feminist legal theory critiques facially neutral laws that affect women and men disparately, and recommends laws that ease the burdens that gendered expectations place on people, usually to the detriment of women. Examples: Laws against pregnancy discrimination are an obvious example of legislation that is specifically related to gender differences. The”comparable worth”approach to pay equity posits that the law should guarantee equal pay for comparable as well as equal work, to accommodate the fact that many occupations are highly segregated by gender. The fact that because they are”different,”women may choose certain occupations over others, one argument goes, shouldn’t condemn them to lower salaries if they are working just as hard and skillfully as if they were in male dominated professions with higher pay scales.

The Sometimes Symbiosis of”Equality”and”Difference”: The”equality”and”difference”approaches to feminist legal theory are sometimes described as being in tension with each other, but I think that concern is exaggerated by people who feel threatened by the idea of making women a more explicit focal point of the legal system. There are certainly people who describe themselves as”equality feminists”who assert that once all laws are facially neutral, the work of feminism is done, but few feminist legal theorists take this position. Nor I am aware of any”difference”proponents, legal scholars or otherwise, who assert that all laws need to explicitly take account of differences between women and men. Many feminist legal scholars adopt a blended approach, believing that for women to achieve true and meaningful equality, sometimes the law needs to treat women and men as equals, and other times it needs to acknowledge and control for differences related to gender.

3. Dominance and Subordination: The third categorical feminist legal approach is that of dominance theory. It recommends stepping back from scrutiny of individual laws and social constraints, and viewing the entire legal system as an overarching mechanism of dominance and subordination. This returns us with a vengeance to the concept of”otherness”articulated by Simone de Beauvoir. In her 1984 essay,”Difference and Dominance: On Sex Discrimination,”Catharine MacKinnon asserted that to treat issues of sex equality as issues of sameness and difference was to take an approach that concealed the substantive way in which men were the measure of all things, writing:

Under the sameness standard, women are measured according to our correspondence with man, our equality judged by our proximity to his measure. Under the difference standard, we are measured accord8ing to our lack of correspondence with him, our womanhood judged by our distance from his measure. Gender neutrality is thus simply the male standard, and the special protection rule is simply the female standard, but do not be deceived: masculinity, or maleness, is the referent for both. Think about it like those anatomy models in medical school. A male body is the human body; all those extra things women have are studied in ob/gyn. It truly is a situation in which more is less. Approaching sex discrimination in this way – as if sex questions are different questions and equality are sameness questions – provided two ways for the law to hold women to a male standard and call that sex equality.

Under the dominance theory approach, when a law has differential effects on the binary gender categories of”female”and”male,”this is an exercise of power, a way in which women are subordinated to men. Limiting activism to changing discreet laws means all that can realistically be achieved by women is less inequality in targeted contexts. Fighting male dominance in any substantive way requires working for political changes that invest women with equal power in all aspects of social life.

4. Anti-Essentialism and Intersectionality: Finally, the fourth category can be described as either the”anti-essentialist”or”intersectionality”approach to feminist legal critique. This approach rejects the idea that gender issues in the law can or should be considered in isolation. Because in real life women can not be stripped down to an”essential”assortment of gender characteristics, legal analysis shouldn’t attempt this either. Other human attributes such as race and sexual orientation inseparably intersect with gender in the physical world, so the anti-essentialist approach demands that they always be considered together with gender in theory as well as practice. It also strongly encourages conterminous consideration of issues like class and religion, which, while not as legally immutable as race and gender, are viewed as having important connections to gendered constructs that should inform and animate feminist legal theory. Example: Employment discrimination law is one area that makes very clear the importance of considering both race and gender. White women derive privilege from their race, while men of color derive privilege from their gender, leaving women of color “privilegeless.” The construction and enforcement of labor and employment laws can reinforce or undermine existing hierarchies.

Feminist Legal Theory and the Power of Personal Experiences: One important tool of feminist legal theory is the use of personal narratives. Personal narratives sometimes get written off by anti-feminists as self-serving stories of little consequence, up until they point that they are immortalized in appellate opinions, when they suddenly become Important Statements of Law. Feminist legal theorists recognize the importance of personal stories to the project of identifying gender-related problems that are caused by the legal system, or that could be improved by the legal system. One oft invoked feminist phrase is that”the personal is political,”which for feminist legal theorists means that lurking within personal narratives are important political issues that are or can be affected by laws. When women began telling personal stories about bosses who groped them or demanded sexual favors, quid pro quo sexual harassment emerged as a political issue with a legal solution. When individual women began talking about experiences with sexual abuse, among other things an understanding that rape laws required reform emerged. Sharing stories reveals that women have many common experiences, and knowing that”it’s not just me”can be validating and empowering for women who feel disadvantaged or oppressed by gender-related issues.

Quilts: My scholarly specialty is intellectual property law, which is comprised of three discreet areas: Copyright law, patent law, and trademark law. Cyberspace law sometimes gets thrown in for good measure as well, since so many legal issues on the Internet involve some facet of intellectual property law. Using the personal narrative format, I will try to illustrate the categories of feminist legal theory I set out above, and I will do this by talking about quilts.

Quilting is a largely female identified art form that does not mesh well with copyright law because quilts are functional, rather than being merely decorative; because quilters use a lot of repetition, such as a particular pattern to represent a wedding, or to symbolize the birth of a child, and these features are intentionally echoed (indeed”copied”) in many later quilts; and because quilts are often designed and executed by amorphous groups (e.g. during”quilting bees”) rather than by a single heroic author. Congress has never attempted to write a provision of the Copyright Act that was specifically applicable to quilts, even though it has done so for many other discreet art forms, categories of writings, and specific technologies. Is this because quilting is viewed as unimportant? And if so, is quilting viewed as unimportant because it is perceived to be the provenance of women? These are the sorts of queries feminist legal theory raises.

The equality approach might ask whether there were”male identified”art forms that are similarly ignored by copyright law. The difference approach might ask whether women are better served by keeping copyright laws away from quilting. The dominance approach might ask why women were quilting at all, instead of using their time and talents to pursue more lucrative and culturally respected art forms. The intersectionality approach might ask whether women of particular races or economic classes quilted more than others, and if this could be part of the explanation for why copyright law ignored quilts. I would initially try to use all these approaches to analyze the interplay (or lack thereof) of quilting and copyright law. However, if I wanted to do more than describe the situation, I’d have to recommend either a change in the law, or a change in the way courts apply and interpret current law. This would require me to favor one theoretical approach over the others, based on what I though the superior normative solution was.

Because I believe that a”low barriers”approach to copyright law is best, I’d be reluctant to recommend adding a specific quilting provision to the Copyright Act if it meant that quilters could more easily assert copyright claims against each other. This would degrade the quilting culture of copying and group authorship that strikes me as socially valuable, so I would reject an”equality”approach that made quilting”equal”to drawings and sculptures. In doing so I would be embracing the”difference”approach, because my views clearly reflect a belief that quilting is different in part because it is women identified, and these differences are beneficial, so the law should preserve them. However, by reifying difference in this manner, I might also be condemning quilting to second class status. It is certainly possible that if the copyright laws treated a quilt more like an oil painting, society might follow suit, and this would elevate the social and economic status of quilters. Valuing”difference”too greatly might preclude this. Applying dominance theory would require me to recognize that women may turn to quilting because they are subordinated by men who deny them access to other creative outlets. It would therefore make more sense to devote resources to reducing impediments to women’s full participation in the fine arts, rather than simply attempting to amend the Copyright Act on behalf of quilting.

One problem with this approach is that quilters may be deeply offended, and wonder why what they do is not being valued. Some will question whether the merits of quilting are being disregarded because quilting is so closely aligned with women: Is quilting getting short shrift because it has”girl cooties”? Others will ask whether, because they prefer quilting to oil painting, they are being accused of”false consciousness,”meaning they are assumed not to recognize that by quilting rather than pursuing other artistic endeavors, they are complicit in their own oppression. I struggle with all this, because while I recognize that framing the world in terms of dominance and subordination tends to abrade the sensitivities of many women, it also seems intuitively correct to me. When I visit a major museum and notice that only a tiny fraction of the exhibited works have been created by women, I don’t blame quilting. I love well made handmade quilts, and I know that producing them requires a lot of specialized effort and skill. But I also recognize that the artistry responsible for them might have been channeled into more”museum worthy”forms of artistic expression if the talents and skills of women had been nurtured and developed for centuries along with those of men.

It is very difficult to reassure quilters that you value and appreciate their work, while simultaneously asserting that quilting is a symptom of subordination. How can upsetting and offending quilters possibly forward the goals of feminism? It’s a very hard question, and one that reappears in some form or another every time dominance theory is applied to social phenomenon.

The intersectionality approach requires me to consciously stop thinking about quilting from a white, middle class perspective and do some research about the role of quilting in the artistic, social and economic lives of women of difference races and in different economic groups than my own. If I specifically determine that the importance of quilting to (for example) poor women is greater than it is to more affluent women, I need to make sure my analysis, and any recommendations I make, take this into consideration. Maybe this means that I will recommend legal changes that would privilege quilt makers (who are mostly women) over quilt sellers (who may be mostly women), and also over quilt buyers (who may also be mostly women). Thinking about the relationships and conflicts between various groups of women can be difficult, but it is also both worthwhile and necessary. While it is certainly possible that if we took over the world, women would start acting just like men, I hold out hope (quite possibly”essentialist”hope, if truth be told) that we could do a bit better, and intersectionality theorists remind feminists that our true project is to build a better world for all women, not just ourselves.

Bibliographies Compiled By Others: External bibliographies of books and articles about feminist legal theory include:

http://www.rdg.ac.uk/law/femlegalnet/index.htm

http://www.library.wisc.edu/libraries/womensstudies/core/crlaw.htm

http://www.cddc.vt.edu/feminism/law.html

http://www.library.ucsb.edu/subjects/blackfeminism/soc_legaltheory.html

http://library.law.pace.edu/research/flt.doc

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More About Pornography

Here’s the first paragraph of an essay Aura Bogado published at ZNet in June of 2005:

In August of last year, just days before the Republican National Convention in New York, I received an email from a local (Los Angeles) chapter of Not In Our Name (NION). The group, which I have never been a member of, had been organizing a letter-writing campaign with hopes of pressuring Mayor Michael Bloomberg to grant permits to protest on the streets of New York against the Convention. NION’s email proclaimed enthusiastically how Larry Flynt had endorsed their letter-writing campaign. As a woman of color who opposes the type of violence that Hustler Magazine* *celebrates in their publication, I was dismayed that NION chose to align themselves with Flynt. For that reason, I sent a personal email back to NION, asking to be removed from the list. Los Angeles NION organizer Robert Corsini not only responded to me, but also forwarded his response, along with my original personal email, to both of my bosses at the local community radio station I work with, and to Larry Flynt Publishing. Because he violated my trust and attempted to ridicule me, I responded to Robert Corsini and the entire email list to explain my disgust with Hustler. A flame war quickly erupted, with people on all sides of the issue exchanging emails. What has followed is an interesting example of power politics, the most recent round ending in Hustler publishing several extremely offensive articles and cartoons condemning me as a ‘femi fascist’ for having the courage to speak out against their brand of pornography as a form of institutionalized gender and racial violence. The experience has led me to examine the greater umbrella of the so-called ‘left’, and to scrutinize the conditions under which a Goliath like Flynt is sanctioned by it.

Later in the essay, Bogado describes personal attacks on her by Susie Bright and Amy Alkon that were published by Hustler, and writes:

In another edition of Hustler, the magazine goes far beyond words and uses caricatures of me in a desperate attempt to further speak vilify me. I have not made any public statements regarding Hustler or anyone related to its publication since August 2004, yet after half-a-year of me remaining silent on the issue, Hustler continues to attack me, featuring horrific images of me: in some, I read a poem a Valentine’s Day poem, ‘Roses are red, Violets are blue, If you’re a white male, I’m gonna kill you’; another has me smashing a microphone because, in the cartoon, a caller into the station I work at sends an email suggesting that I like ‘having [my] mouth near a microphone because it reminds [me] of a white male’s cock.’; yet another cartoon includes a line of ‘Aura Bogado Jewelry’- in it, I have a penis pierced through my tongue.

At the bottom of the linked ZNET page, there are links to responses from Susie Bright and Not In Our Name. Bogado’s reply to Bright’s response is here. Larry Flynt’s reaction was to call Bogado’s essay “censorship.” Seriously, here’s his final sentence: “It’s okay for the feminists to express their opinions:no matter how ill-informed:but when they try to censor someone else’s activist efforts, it’s time to dismiss them as counterproductive and a threat to the movement.” So according to Flynt, pornography is free speech, but when a private person criticizes pornography, that is censorship. Here is an earlier excerpt from Flynt’s reply:

Finally, we have to point out that Bogado has apparently gone on to create a new Web site:HustlingTheLeft.com:which seems to have as its main function, the intimidation and bashing of Leftists who have appeared in HUSTLER. While we will have more to say about this in future issues, there’s one question that cannot wait: How long is the Left going to allow one fringe group to terrorize the rest of us?

The actual founder of “Hustling the Left” is Nikki Craft. I’m not taking a position in this particular dispute, which may have other dimensions I am not aware of, now that over a year has passed since Bogado’s piece was published. I knew before reading Bogado’s essay that Hustler favors overtly racist content (click here if you care to see some awful examples), but I didn’t realize Flynt published “Barely Legal.” Now I know that too. I’ve posted the link to Bogado’s essay, however, because I know that Larry Flynt and his minions, and his ilk, are going after anti-porn feminists in the blogosphere much as they did Bogado. If you read feminist blogs regularly, you’ve seen evidence of this too. I’m not sure I know what to do about this, but ignoring it surely won’t help preserve “free speech” if the concept is to have any meaning at all.

–Ann Bartow

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Motherless in Nicaragua

Today, Nicaragua’s complete abortion ban is expected to be signed into law. Already, women are dying, leaving behind kids and families because of the ban.

Think that wouldn’t be the case in the United States if Roe v. Wade were overturned? Think again. When abortion is illegal, women don’t stop having abortions; they stop having safe abortions.

They also leave behind families and kids after they die from those unsafe abortions. For a powerful look into this tragedy pre-Roe v. Wade, everyone should track down and watch Motherless. Make sure you have tissues with you and then get out there and fight to save safe abortion for everyone who wants one.

– David S. Cohen

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We’ll Laugh When We Are Equal

“[I]t doesn’t take great courage to bash someone everybody else is also already bashing.”

That is a quote from Echidne of the Snakes, in a post in which she also writes:

…[S]uppose now that I could morph into two versions, one male and one female, but otherwise with the same interests. Which of those two versions would I send to take a trip to Iran or to Saudi Arabia or to many other similar countries? The guy version, of course. Because the world out there is NOT neutral to men and women. There are countries where women can’t do anything much on their own, and in many places a woman traveling alone is fair game for rape and harassment. In a way the most fanatic Evolutionary Psychologists forget that the environment in which we live is not just the naturel* environment but also the human-made environment, and that for women the environment also consists of the way men behave. What is tricky about all this is that a man might never “see” the environment a woman sees, because he will not be treated in the same manner, and so he could quite sincerely not see the immediate problems women face.

It’s a useful articulation of the gender divide that also surfaces around certain kinds of humor. When someone like Howard Stern goes on a comedic riff about the ways that women and men relate to each other, whether you think he is making fun of sexism, or being a sexist, depends on your subjective internal wiring. That’s why, though some feminists like humor of the sort reflected in the satirical movie Borat (see short clip here), other women won’t laugh. This, I think, is because the constant negative and dismissive stereotyping of females “in jest” by Supposedly Liberal Dudes wears some of us down, and trying to discern a “positive” motive behind the mockery hardly seems worth the effort, especially if the humor at issue never truly gives women the upper hand. Borat targets feminists in the same way the movie targets racists. There is a message there that not all of us find funny or edifying.

Oddly enough, one of the reasons I feel it is necessary to at least nominally speak out against Borat comes from the same place that Borat does. Here is an excerpt from a Rolling Stone interview with Sacha Baron Cohen, the actor and driving force behind Borat:

“Borat essentially works as a tool,” Baron Cohen says. “By himself being anti-Semitic, he lets people lower their guard and expose their own prejudice, whether it’s anti-Semitism or an acceptance of anti-Semitism. ‘Throw the Jew Down the Well’ [a song performed at a country & western bar during Da Ali G Show] was a very controversial sketch, and some members of the Jewish community thought that it was actually going to encourage anti-Semitism. But to me it revealed something about that bar in Tucson. And the question is: Did it reveal that they were anti-Semitic? Perhaps. But maybe it just revealed that they were indifferent to anti-Semitism.

“I remember, when I was in university I studied history, and there was this one major historian of the Third Reich, Ian Kershaw. And his quote was, ‘The path to Auschwitz was paved with indifference.’ I know it’s not very funny being a comedian talking about the Holocaust, but I think it’s an interesting idea that not everyone in Germany had to be a raving anti-Semite. They just had to be apathetic.”

I’d agree that Borat may be a tool, but of what I am not so sure. It targets bad actors. So why did the movie go after feminists? To prove we are humorless? The Supposedly Liberal Dudes seem to love this movie, and I can’t help thinking that this is in part because it gives them an acceptable outlet for their latent anti-feminism. Reading their blogs regularly suggests they are at best “good Germans” who can’t be bothered to challenge the misogynist homophobes at “peer” blogs, or in their own comments threads. And often they do hilarious things like critically refering to the DC press corps as “catty little …snots” who “squealed like schoolgirls,” and “spite girls” who “missed their fast times at DC High.”

–Ann Bartow

*Yes I know this word is misspelled, and Echidne spelled it correctly, but a correct spelling here causes Word Press to “internal server error” the entire post, I have no idea why. Apologies to Echidne for this.

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Robert Jensen on Pornography

Robert Jensen is a journalism professor at the University of Texas at Austin who writes critically about pornography. To say that being anti-pornography is a culturally unpopular view is to put it lightly, and he doubtlessy spends a lot of time getting attacked as a collaborator with the reactionary religious right, though nothing about his actual writing would suggest that he is. He’s posted a column here entitled “Pornographic Query: Is a DP Inherently Sexist?” in which he considers whether “the sexual practice in which two men penetrate a woman anally and vaginally at the same time — a”DP,”or double penetration in the vernacular of the pornography industry” is inherently sexist. Here is an excerpt:

So, is a DP inherently degrading and sexist? In the minds of the men who want to watch them, I think the answer is yes. That is, men understand and experience it as a degrading and sexist practice. That’s why it’s sexually exciting, precisely because of men’s assumption that women don’t want it — because it’s degrading, something that has to be forced on women who don’t want it.

Please note: This conclusion is not based on a moral or political judgment of mine about the practice. It’s based on the moral and political judgments of the men who want to watch DPs. Lest we float too far away from the real world of pornography, let’s remember how DP movies are marketed to men. I put”double penetration”into Google, and this was the first site with text that explained DPs to potential consumers:

“This blonde slut is in serious double penetration hardcore sex. She is getting her pussy and asshole destroyed by two fat cocks that will enter her holes and make her cry. Her pussy and asshole were tight a long time before, but now this slut is ready and willing to do anything like double or triple penetration hardcore sex scene. Her holes are destroyed and she cannot be satisfied with one cock so we give her two cocks for the beginning!”

There may be DP movies marketed with less overt misogyny, but this is typical of the material I have seen. Again, I think the pattern is important.

My main goal here is to refocus our attention. When this question about the nature of DPs is posed to me by men, their focus is implicitly on women: Is a DP inherently degrading for a woman and therefore sexist? The more important question: Is a DP inherently degrading in the minds of men? The only conclusion I can reach is that men think of a DP as a way to degrade women. Based on my analysis of men’s use of pornography, I believe men see a DP as something dirty and degrading that is pleasurable to watch women submitting to.

Jensen published another essay here, entitled “The Death of Empathy.” Here is an excerpt from this work:

The student said that he watched gonzo pornography regularly and thought I had distorted the reality of such material. None of what he watched, he said, sounded like what I had described. “The stuff I like — it’s just movies of people who liked to party,” he told me.

I asked him to tell me more about what he watched. As he talked, it became clear he was describing exactly the kind of material I had discussed, and I could see the realization emerge in him: My assessment of the rough and degrading nature of that pornography was accurate, and he had simply never recognized it. When he mentioned a type of sex he liked to watch in pornography called a DP — double penetration, in which a woman is penetrated vaginally and anally at the same time — it really started to dawn on him: In these scenes, the sex was defined by men’s sense of control over, and domination of, women.

I pressed a bit more. What kind of things did the men call the woman during this sex? I asked. As he started to reproduce some of the terms — all names meant to demean and insult women — it became impossible for him to avoid the conclusion that the pornography he had been consuming is not just sex, but sex in which men act out contempt for women.

At that point, he stammered, “But I don’t hate women. I love women. I wouldn’t use pornography like that.”

That contradiction wasn’t going to be worked out in the moment. Instead, I told the student that I wasn’t arguing that he hated women but was simply pointing out he had been getting sexual pleasure from pornography that expressed hatred for women.

Pornography and its relationship to sexual freedom are contentious issues for feminists. Jensen is a man who is writing primarily about pornography and men.   If the subject area is of interest, read these pieces in their entireties and see what you think.

–Ann Bartow

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Her Husband Got Her the Job, Isn’t He Awesome?

Many extremely brilliant law professors are romantically paired with other law professors; on a personal level, some of my favorite people in legal education are part of “two law prof” couples; and there is an overlap between these categories that approaches 100%. If the law profs in question and their employing institutions approach things correctly, faculty “couples” are not only unproblematic, but can actually have positive effects upon the culture of a law school. It just takes a little planning, some sensitivity to others, and a healthy dose of good judgment to avoid or mitigate the occasional “nepotisic” conflicts that can arise. The most important thing, I think, is to treat each coupled person as an individual, who succeeds or fails on her own merits, which is why this article/column/tripe from the Chron is like fingernails on a chalkboard. Here are some excerpts:

My husband, D.B., got me into law school. Then he got me a one-year stint as a visiting assistant professor of law. He has worked his magic so artistically that both times it seemed almost accidental, but I am certain he knows what he’s doing.

In this modern age, I know I am not supposed to admit that I have achieved both of those pivotal career goals largely through the good graces of my thoughtful, brilliant husband, but to pretend otherwise would be a delusion of Michael Jacksonian proportions. …

… We had different last names for the first five years of our marriage (I changed mine toward the end of our law-school years so we could sit together at graduation), but when we were first applying to law schools we didn’t let on in our applications that we were married.

Our first choice accepted him immediately and sent me a very nice letter saying, “We’ll get back to you soon.” A week later, D.B. received an e-mail message from the dean of admissions, inviting him to go to dinner with a professor who would be in our town later that week.

D.B. started working his magic. In his reply, he said something along the lines of “Gee, I’d love to, but I don’t want to waste the school’s time and money if my wife isn’t admitted. Oh, and my wife’s name is . . . ”

I got an e-mail message 30 minutes later from the dean of admissions congratulating me on my acceptance. …

… Thanks to D.B. Again. He got an offer to be a visiting assistant professor at a Midwestern law school. D.B. turned on the charm that he swears isn’t charm but is really just his way of sharing the facts, and told the school: “I would love to accept your offer, but my wife’s a lawyer, and she needs a job, too, and how many jobs are there in the middle of semi-nowhere?”

The school asked him to have me send my CV, which I did. And then the school offered me a visiting job just like the one it had offered him. See? I’m not making this up. In the extremely competitive world of legal academics, my husband managed to get two teaching jobs: one for me and one for him. He’s always been excellent at sharing. …

Will he teach her classes, and write her scholarship for her as well? Ugh, as if the female components of heterosexual faculty couples didn’t have enough to overcome already…

–Ann Bartow, with thanks to Susan Kuo

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“The Glass Ceiling” in Washington State

Via Heart at Women’s Space/The Margins, an article from the Seattle Post-Intelligencer that reports:

…In a state that made history last year by becoming the first to have a female governor and two women serving in the U.S. Senate, women on average hold fewer than one in five senior-level executive jobs at the top 73 public companies. Records compiled and analyzed by the P-I also show that in the boardroom, just 14 percent of all seats at those companies belong to women.

Despite Washington’s progressive reputation and blue-state leanings, not one of those companies has women in the majority as executives or in board composition. Only Seattle-based Blue Nile has an equal number of men and women in senior management and on its board. …

glassceiling_glancechart.gif

… Starbucks Chairman Howard Schultz said many major corporations that want female executives on their boards are fighting for the same candidates.

“Ten years ago, public CEOs were on five or more boards. But today you would be hard-pressed to find public CEOs on three boards,” Schultz said. “Every corporation in America is searching for the same board members. We are all targeting the same people.”

But Catalyst, a New York-based national research organization that examines career advancement for women, said there are plenty of female candidates who can and are willing to move into executive positions or board seats.

Catalyst said women account for slightly more than half of all managerial and professional workers, and more than a third of Master of Business Administration recipients. The organization also said a lack of women in executive posts could hurt a company’s bottom line.

In a 2005 Census of Fortune 500 companies, Catalyst found that companies with the highest percentage of female corporate officers experienced, on average, a 35 percent higher return on equity and a 34 percent higher total return to shareholders than those with the lowest percentage of female corporate officers. …

Read the whole thing here.

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Tab Stinks, Don’t Drink this Crap, Part 2

Part 1 is here.

Now this:

Tab half ad.jpg
Full advertisement visible here. Blech! This demonstrates worst taste than the actual beverage, which is basically “pink carbonated essence of bathroom cleanser.” Via Counterfeit Chic.

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“The Myth of Black Women’s Progress: A Conversation with Activist and Filmmaker Aishah Shahidah Simmons”

The online version of the Black Agenda Report is featuring an interview by Tamara K. Nopper with Aishah Shahidah Simmons, who made the rape documentary NO! The interview is accessible here. Below is the opening paragraph:

Aishah Shahidah Simmons is the director of NO!, a feature length documentary that unveils the reality of intra-racial rape, other forms of sexual violence, and healing in African-American communities. It has taken Simmons eleven years to complete NO! because of a lack of support from various funders and mixed responses, including those from the Black community. But because of consistent support from some and a growing amount of support from both Blacks and non-Blacks, NO! was finally completed in 2005. Now Simmons is putting her efforts into getting the film out there. She sits down with writer Tamara K. Nopper to talk about how Black women are situated in the contemporary conversation of the”crisis facing Black men,”and how this informs how Black women’s experiences of rape and sexual assault are addressed.

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Do Women Find Borat Funny?

Gail Dines, a Professor of Sociology and Women’s Studies at Wheelock College in Boson, has published a sharp critique of Sacha Baron Cohen’s Borat movie.   In CounterPunch magazine, Professor Dines argues:

[W]hen Cohen makes misogynist jokes about rape, prostitution and incest, they feel anything but funny. Okay, so Cohen may well be trying to satirize American sexism by unveiling the dark side of American men but when the audience laughs, I feel rage because I know that some of the men in the audience may well be on the prowl that night ….

Violence against women, unlike violence against Jews, is a major public health issue of our time and the costs to women makes it a very unfunny topic. In recent school shootings, girls were specifically targeted by men, though few newspaper reports highlight this. Had the killer selected only Jews to kill, there would have been a national debate on the resurgence of anti-Semitism in America …. In Borat, the jokes about women dying (his wife), being raped (his sister) or being stalked by a crazed fan (Pamela Anderson) are passed off as business as usual in the life of being a woman….

I do know that the fear I feel in the world is because of my gender, not my religion. This is what separates me, a Jewish woman, from Sasha Baron Cohen, a Jewish man.

Professor Dines’ full article is available here.

-Posted by Bridget Crawford

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Did They Photoshop In Some Nursing Pads, Too?

elizvargasmc.jpg

According to the Drudge Report, this picture of former ABC News anchor Elizabeth Vargas from the December issue of Marie Claire magazine is a fake:  

A source close to the anchor says Vargas’ is disappointed but has a sense of humor about the whole thing.

“Elizabeth was more than happy to sit for the interview but was disturbed that the magazine would set aside basic journalistic standards to photoshop her head onto a fake image. Vargas did joke that her real baby is cuter, that she is proud to breastfeed her newborn but wouldn’t do it at the anchor desk and that she wouldn’t be caught dead in that ugly gold blouse!”  

In the accompanying interview, Vargas acknowledges that NOW, the Feminist Majority Foundation and the National Counsel of Women’s Organizations protested her hurried departure from ABC,  but she suggests that these organizations should have consulted her first.   Vargas said, “I salute 100 percent these organizations.   But I will tell you, nobody from any of them ever spoke to me.   No one ever asked, point blank, ‘What happened to you?   Did you get pushed out because you’re pregnant, and are you upset about it?'”

Vargas  suggests that the validity of feminist  charges of sexism somehow  hinges on her own subjective perception.   Yet she hasn’t shared her views.   We don’t know (should we care?) whether Vargas thinks she was  passed over for the evening news anchor position because she was pregnant.   But Drudge’s “source close to Vargas” did  let us know her opinion of the gold blouse.   I definitely don’t care about that.

-Posted by Bridget Crawford  

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Ignore the Splog…

Some shady splog outfit is shadowing this blog. Hopefully “Quick Informative on Law Related!” will be dissuaded soon…   Apologies for the trackbacks that shadow the links here.

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The Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act

A recent article by Diane E. Dees at the Mojoblog pointed out that in response to steps being taken to stop institutionalized animal abuse, espcially “factory farming,” the farming industry was lobbying for the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act, which, she observed:

…would make it a crime punishable by imprisonment to engage in any act that causes an “animal enterprise” (factory farm, puppy mill, research facility, pet stores, circus, etc.) to lose a profit. These acts include legal activities, such as peaceful protesting and organizing media boycotts. Furthermore, it would make no difference if the animal enterprise were engaging in an obviously illegal activity. Also, there is no exemption for financial damage caused to an enterprise by the dissemination of public information.

Unfortunately, she noted at The Dees Diversion that it passed the House on 11/13. She says it “exacts harsher penalties on those who protest research laboratories, and also makes it easy to prosecute on behalf of anyone connected in any way with an animal enterprise–a wife, a sister, a vendor, an attorney, a public relations firm, etc.” At a moment in history when Supposedly Liberal Dudes are claiming that the right to purchase lap dances at strip clubs is at the cutting edge of the First Amendment, it’s perplexing that the free speech ramifications of this legislation aren’t getting more attention. Actually, I’m not perplexed at all; “depressed” is a more accurate description.

–Ann Bartow

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Update From NARAL Pro-Choice America

Molly W. Jackson of NARAL Pro-Choice America writes:    
I just wanted to pass along this report and share with you some of the misinformation that is floating around regarding, among other things,  how choice played in the ’06 Elections.    CNN host T. J. Holmes failed to correct the statement made by Amy Holmes that “many of the Democrats who were just elected, especially to the House,” are socially conservative” and “pro-life.”   In reality, pro-choice Americans elected three new pro-choice senators and gained more than 20 pro-choice members of the House.   Click here to read  more.
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“Stop the Press Spree Against Working Moms”

Read Sheila Gibbons’ essay by that name here. Below is an excerpt:

…Off-kilter news reporting on the reasons women leave jobs, laced with amateur psychology and traces of biological determinism, have been creating a false impression about women’s employment patterns, says an attention-getting report last month by the Center for WorkLife Law, a research and advocacy group at the University of California, Hastings College of the Law.

“‘Opt Out’–or Pushed Out? The Untold Story of Why Women Leave the Work Force,” released Oct. 17, analyzed 119 newspaper articles (excluding commentary) about women leaving the paid work force between 1980 and 2006. A great deal of this journalism, the authors find, understates the severity of the economic consequences for women who are forced out of jobs by inflexible employers and those who believe working mothers are bad for the bottom line.

Most insidious, says the report, is that reporters often depict women abandoning the workplace as a matter of their personal preference, not a symptom of a nationwide crisis for which employer rigidity and lack of family supports are largely to blame.

The “opt out” stories overwhelmingly focus on white, affluent women with white-collar jobs, a skewed demographic from which to draw conclusions about a majority of working women, given that only about 8 percent of women hold such jobs.

The articles also pinpointed the pull of family life as the main reason women quit, whereas a number of diverse sources collected by the Center–an in-depth study of fast-track women; census data analyses; and its own research, including its 2006 report on family responsibilities discrimination, “Litigating the Maternal Wall”–add to the mountain of evidence that affirms most women cite workplace “pushes” (such as inflexible jobs) as a key reason for their decision to leave. …

The 16th annual CCH Unscheduled Absence Survey referenced in the Gibbons essay (though not in the above excerpt) is summarized here. As linked above in the excerpt, the Center for WorkLife Law report: “Opt Out”or Pushed Out: How the Press Covers Work/Family Conflict. The Untold Story of Why Women Leave the Workforce, by Joan C. Williams. Jessica Manvell and Stephanie Bornstein is available here. A summary of the report is available here. Below is an exceprt from this news story:

… Most mothers do not opt out,” says Joan Williams, director of the Center for WorkLife Law at the University of California, Hastings. “They are pushed out by workplace inflexibility, the lack of supports, and a workplace bias against mothers.” In one recent survey, 86 percent of women cited obstacles such as inflexible jobs as a key reason behind their decision to leave.

Ms. Williams is coauthor of a report released last week, ” ‘Opt Out’ or Pushed Out?: How the Press Covers Work/Family Conflicts.” The study finds that press coverage of these issues typically focuses on highly educated professional women who account for just 8 percent of American women. Ms. Belkin’s now-famous “opt-out” article, for example, profiled eight women who were graduates of Princeton, her alma mater. Such articles also give the impression that women’s departure from work is a matter of choice.

These rarefied portrayals do not feature workers like Michelle Lee of Norfolk, Va. She has never heard the term “opt out.” And she never intended to leave her job as an administrative assistant at a pharmaceutical company. But when she needed time off to take her three sons to various appointments for chronic conditions, her boss was unbending.

“I was willing to come in early, leave late, and eat at my desk to make up the time,” Ms. Lee says. “They gave me an ultimatum: I could not miss any more days. I told them it would be better for me to resign right now.”

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The “Plan B” Contraceptive Can Be Purchased Online at Drugstore.com

See this site. Via Amanda Marcotte at Pandagon. Educational information about Plan B is available here. The Barr Pharmaceuticals (makers of Plan B) site is here. Prevous posts about Plan B here and here.

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The Links Are On Me!

“Inclusion” at Dru Blood

“Google, Rape and Search Data” at Feminish

“University, Court and Slave” by Al Brophy at Blackprof

“Feminists From Around the Bloc” at The F-Word

“A Whole New World! The First Three Hours.” at Finslippy

“The New Congress and the ADA” at Disability Law

“How to Balance Badly: Another Way That News Articles Can Suck” at Derivative Work

“Why is Female Leadership So Threatening?” at Mad, Melancholic Feminista

“College and Prescription Meds” at Mama-Feminista

“Reflections on Playboy, Girls Gone Wild, and Softcore Porn” at The Happy Feminist

And here’s something amusing from Dr. Violet Socks at the Reclusive Leftist:

Reading up on the Imaginary-Procedure Abortion Ban case before the Supreme Court, this headline caught my jaundiced eye:

Abortion Foes Face Pair of Big Tests

I keep thinking there’s a letter missing.

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The Chief and “Partial Birth Abortion”

I may be in the minority here, but I still am holding out hope that Chief Justice Roberts joins Justices Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer (and maybe Kennedy?) in striking down the federal “partial birth abortion” statute. Ever since he stressed at his confirmation hearings that he favored a “modest” jurisprudence, I’ve held out hope that he would not necessarily agree with 2000’s Stenberg v. Carhart, but that he would see the damage to the Court’s integrity that overturning it just seven years later would do. Reversing a decision in such a highly politicized area would certainly not be a modest act for the Chief.

After Roberts did nothing to instill optimism at oral argument on the case last week, Dan Markel’s summary of the Chief’s appearance at the University of Miami yesterday is rekindling my hope. The Chief extolled a Court that takes small steps while decrying boldness in the judiciary. Overturning a precedent in this area of the law would certainly be bold and not a small step. Even if Markel’s characterization of the Chief as minimalist isn’t right and instead Roberts is more interested in the integrity of the Court regardless of minimalism, I’m still hopeful. Changing the outcome of a case just a few years later merely because the membership of the Court has changed does nothing to further the integrity of the court.

I’m hardly saying that the Chief is a shoo-in for striking down the federal law and upholding Stenberg, but I think there’s good reason to think he could still be the fifth vote . . . if only for reasons of minimalism or institutional integrity.

– David S. Cohen

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Thin Air

When I was in college in the early 1980s, one of my work-study jobs was in the Labor-Management Documentation Center at Cornell University’s Martin P. Catherwood Library. I often summarized and filed union arbitration materials, and I remember reading a lot about flight attendants who got fired for being “over weight.” In 1993 Anna Quindlen published a column in the NYT entitled “Public & Private; In Thin Air.” Here are a couple of excerpts:

Flight attendants still have weight limits on many airlines. If you are fat, you get fired. Only what passes for fat is average to you or me.

Sue Liebling of Seattle is 44 yea old, stands 5 feet 4, weighs 144 pounds and wears a size 10 dress. Each year she has to complete an emergency training course, keeping current on all those crash contingencies we passengers don’t like to consider at 30,000 feet. But if she doesn’t get back down to 135 on schedule, 24 years of experience at United Airlines is down the drain.

Barbara O’Brien of Eugene, Ore., just got suspended without pay, even though she recently dropped 28 pounds, baby weight from her second pregnancy. When she flew to San Francisco last week to work a United overseas flight, she was still 12 pounds over her maximum of 133, and they sent her packing.

This small cul-de-sac of institutional stupidity reflects a larger problem with consumer services in America: they are behind the learning curve of consumers. This is how Detroit continued to turn out big pig cars for some time after gasoline had gone on the gold standard, and how manufacturers of women’s apparel took it into their heads to bring back hobble skirts at a time when women are on the move. …

…The official United explanation for weight limits has to do with “professional appearance.” In other words, svelte equals professional. So much for telling girls not to put their fingers down their throat to bring up lunch, that it is performance and not appearance that counts. Some flight attendants make weight in the same way bulimics and anorexics do: laxatives, diuretics and purging.

But those who work within the flight attendants’ unions think the restrictions have an uglier purpose, that they combine a yen for the “Fly me” era with the more contemporary corporate yearning to junk older, more experienced workers for younger, less costly ones. Recently one flight attendants’ union filed a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission charging that the United policy “perpetuates a sex-based stereotype that female flight attendants must be slim-bodied, attractive women, rather than competent employees.” …

The suit that Quindlen is probably referring to, Frank v. United Airlines, began in 1992. It was brought by experienced flight attendants who had attempted to lose weight, but were disciplined and/or terminated for failing to comply with United’s maximum weight requirements, as an employment discrimination class action. They lost in a district court but won in the Ninth Circuit. The suit was finally settled almost twelve years later, on February 11, 2004, but ten years earlier the litigation had persuaded United to abolish its weight requirements.

I bring all this up, because via this post by Samhita at Feministing, I learned that Delhi’s Supreme Court is currently hearing a dispute concerning whether Indian Airlines, the state-owned air carrier, can fire its flight attendants for being too heavy. An article in the UK Guardian reports:

…Eleven employees, recently grounded for putting on too much weight, claim that the airline has changed its vision of the Indian feminine ideal – abandoning the more buxom prototype in favour of a more westernised, skinny model, which staff see as ‘unattainable’.

Indian Airlines will argue that this is a case of selecting the ‘best ambassadors’ to represent the national airline, and the country as a whole, and will also claim that thinner employees are more agile and better equipped to tackle terrorist incidents and other emergencies.

‘They want to discard the heavier women and bring in newer, thinner models,’ said Sheela Joshi, an air hostess who was grounded after a spot weigh-in found she was 1.9kg over the prescribed limit for her height.

Distressed at the prospect of losing her job after 25 years with the company, she went on a crash diet, and now eats only one meal a day to try to keep within the limit. She has been allowed to fly again, but describes the process as demeaning. ‘This is our national carrier and should represent the dignity of Indian culture. These new policies are humiliating to women.’

An internal memo earlier this year warned cabin staff they would be banned from flying if random weight checks found them to be over a fixed weight, set out in a company chart. Although weight guidelines have always been in place, previously they were not rigorously enforced. Lawyers for the cabin crew unions say that around 130 members of staff have been temporarily suspended without pay for putting on too much weight, although most are now back at work.

The court will rule this week on whether the airline is within its rights to stop paying staff, grounded because of their weight, and lawyers will decide whether it is a breach of constitutional rights to discriminate against overweight staff. …

I hope the flight attendants get justice.

–Ann Bartow

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Ich bin kein Berliner: She is Not a Jelly Doughnut

For post title context, watch this. She has done a remarkable series of videos about mental health issues. Via The Trouble With Spikol, where Liz Spikol writes: “I admire this woman for trying to talk about her experience, and for saying what I should say more often: You’re not alone.”

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“Women still account for only 17 percent of law firm partners, 20 percent of federal judges and 14 percent of Fortune 500 general counsels. And, at the current rate, the number of women partners won’t reach parity with the number of male partners until 2088.”

That’s a quote from this Harvard Law School Alumni Bulletin entitled: “Women are still second-class citizens in the legal profession. What can be done about it?”

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This is what happens when library volunteers do drugs.

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volnteer.JPG
books.jpg

Any questions?

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The Legal Profession Blog Asks: “Are the Low Numbers of Female Supreme Court Law Clerks a Statistical Blip?”

See full post by Alan Childress here. Below is a short excerpt:

David Kaye (Ariz. State, Law) and Joseph Gastwirth (GW, Arts & Sci. [Stats Dept.]) have just posted on SSRN Law & Soc’y: Legal Prof., their new article, “Where Have All the Women Gone? ‘Random Variation’ in the Supreme Court Clerkship Lottery.”  Only 7 of 37 of this year’s Supreme Court law clerks are women, a drop nearing 50%, leading to a popular-media outcry.   Justices Breyer and Souter have publicly defended the low numbers as the product of “random variation in the applicant pool,” but apparently did not convince many onlookers, some of whom assert “insidious discrimination” in the drop.

The authors test the claim using their experience with statistics (David Kaye, for instance, is one of the most respected statisticians in the law school world and coauthor of the book Prove It With Figures; and Gastwirth edited Statistical Science in the Courtroom).   They conclude that the numbers are not improbable and within an expected range, given the applicant pool.   [Elsewhere they have reported, similarly, that this year’s drop is not “statistically significant,” adding “that for all the raised eyebrows, the numbers are not so dramatic as to establish that this year’s decline is anything other than the ‘random variation’ asserted by Souter and Breyer.”]   But this relatively clean bill of health only works, they note in the SSRN article, court-wide.   Some individual Justices have numbers so low that it is hard to explain them by chance or fluctuations. …

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Parental Notification Ballot Initiatives Defeated

Lost in this week’s excitement over all the other good news from the elections, I overlooked some ballot initiative good news as well. From Women’s eNews: “In Oregon and California, voters defeated measures that would have required doctors to notify a parent before performing an abortion on a minor. Voters defeated California’s Proposition 85 by 54 percent to 46 percent, and Oregon’s Measure 43 was rejected with a 55 percent vote.”

– David S. Cohen

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“Progressives Set To Be Largest Democratic Congressional Caucus”

From the Feminist Daily News Wire:

US Representatives Barbara Lee (D-CA) and Lynn Woolsey (D-CA), the co-chairs of the Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC), have announced that they expect at least seven new members of Congress to join the CPC and that the CPC will be the largest sub-group of the Democratic party in the 110th Congress. The CPC currently has 64 members, including Representative Neil Abercrombie (D-HI), a supporter of the Afghan Women’s Empowerment Act; openly lesbian Representative Tammy Baldwin (D-WI); and strong women Representatives Gwen Moore (D-WI), Eleanor Holmes-Norton (D-DC), Jan Schakowsky (D-IL), Louise Slaughter (D-NY), Hilda Solis (D-CA), and Maxine Waters (D-CA). According to The Nation, the CPC will not only be the largest caucus in Congress, but also the most racially and regionally diverse.

Newly elected House Democrats Jerry McNerney (CA), Ed Perlmutter (CO), Bruce Braley (IA), John Sarbanes (MD), Keith Ellison (MN), Carol Shear-Porter (NH), Paul Hodes (NH), and John Hall (NY) are all likely additions to the CPC based on their platforms that resonate strongly with the goals of the CPC, The Nation reports. …

The CPC website is here.

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The Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund: “Sixty-seven Victory-endorsed candidates were elected to federal, state and local offices, with some winning historic races that make them the first openly gay or lesbian candidates ever elected in their states or legislative bodies.”

Press release with more information here.

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Ellen Willis

Ellen Willis, journalist, feminist, cultural critic, and professor of journalism at NYU died of lung cancer on November 10, 2006. Her NYT obituary can be accessed here. It notes: “She was a founder of Redstockings, a short-lived but highly influential radical feminist group begun in 1969. In the 1980s, she helped found No More Nice Girls, a street theater and protest group that focused on abortion rights.”

The passing of Ellen Willis has been noted at many fine blogs including Le Blogue Berube, Sivacracy, and Pandagon.

Links to her articles that appeared in The Nation are available here. Her NYU homepage, with more links to essays, is here. She was an interesting and generally nuanced writer about many complicated social issues. Here is an excerpt from an essay she wrote entited “Lust Horizons: The ‘Voice’ and the Women’s Movement”:

…The cultural backlash was going strong, but there was little point in attacking the Christian right or Ronald Reagan to Voice readers. As writers and editors the feminists at the Voice were more concerned with confronting the left:which increasingly defended “traditional values” and disparaged feminist concerns like abortion as an elitist distraction from “real” issues:and conservative trends in the feminist movement itself.

During the ’80s the Voice became the prime public forum for “politically incorrect” radical-feminist libertarians who continued to criticize marriage and the family, insisted on defending abortion, not just “choice,” and advocated what would come to be known (after a piece of mine called “Lust Horizons: Is the Women’s Movement Pro-Sex?”) as “pro-sex feminism.” We took on the anti-pornography movement, which had dominated the feminist conversation about sex: As we saw it, the claim that “pornography is violence against women” was code for the neo-Victorian idea that men want sex and women endure it.

During this period, internal tensions at the Voice ran high, in the latest version of the old battle between (mostly straight male) writers and editors of “real” political news and (largely female and gay male) purveyors of culture. We feminists saw the male politicos as hopelessly conservative. (Nat Hentoff, having decided to join the small left wing of the right-to-life movement, was a particular irritant, though in retrospect I see his presence as a useful challenge:it certainly forced me to rethink and sharpen my arguments.) They did not take kindly to our efforts to raise their consciousness about sexism in the office and in the paper:
We might have thought of ourselves as sexy rebels against feminist party lines, but they called us “Stalinist feminists,” in a foreshadowing of Rush Limbaugh’s “Feminazi” label. We retaliated by dubbing them “the white boys.” The fights often spilled over onto the Voice‘s pages:yet another way the paper was unique in documenting the culture of the left.

I found the sentence in the first excerpted paragraph: “As writers and editors the feminists at the Voice were more concerned with confronting the left:which increasingly defended “traditional values” and disparaged feminist concerns like abortion as an elitist distraction from “real” issues:and conservative trends in the feminist movement itself,” particularly arresting because it seems to me like the dismissal and disparagement of reproductive rights issues by newly empowered Supposedly Liberal Dudes is a huge problem feminists need to wrestle with right now. The vote in South Dakota helped illustrate that people care about abortion rights, but how do we get the message to the people reifying antichoice Democrats like Harry Reid?

Her essays about pornography are controversial, as writings about pornography tend to be. Many accounts I’ve seen these last few days tend to oversimplify her views, so it is worth making an effort to actually read her words if this issue is of interest.

–Ann Bartow

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CFP: Human Rights in Child Welfare

CALL FOR PAPERS
Special Issue: Human Rights in Child Welfare
Journal of Intergroup Relations
Journal of the National Association of Human Rights Workers
Guest editors: Laura Dreuth Zeman and Julie A. Steen, School of Social Work, Southern Illinois University – Carbondale

This call for papers focuses on critical human rights conflicts and their application to child welfare. The special issue will provide an examination of the multiple perspectives of children and biological, adoptive, and foster parents along with child welfare workers. Those in the field know a great deal about risk factors for abuse and neglect, consequences of abuse and neglect, and service models for treating victims and abusers. However, the field has yet to critically examine the rights of those involved. This special edition addresses this need by examining human rights from diverse perspectives, families, and environments that challenge child welfare workers and systems.

The special issue editors welcome case examples, first person narratives, policy analyses and original research that critically examine human rights conflicts in child welfare
practice.

Examples of possible topics include:
• Decision-making regarding family reconciliation and termination,
• Poverty,
• Race, discrimination, and cross cultural foster and adoptive placements,
• Gay, Lesbian, Bi-sexual, and Transgender biases and issues in foster care,
• Privacy,
• Native Americans and,
• International human rights challenges in child welfare including homeless children, AIDS orphans, child labor or slavery, refugee parents and their children.

Paper submission: Manuscripts submitted will pass through the Journal’s standard peer review process. Accepted manuscripts are expected to meet the APA style formatting guidelines of the Journal of Intergroup Relations prior to publication.

Authors can send inquiries or can submit an electronic copy (MS Word, or RTF formats), with full contact details, by email to Laura Dreuth Zeman, dreuth@siu.edu or Julie Steen, jsteen@siu.edu.

Deadlines for paper submission: February 1st 2007

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Death of CIANA?

While the new Democratically-controlled Congress isn’t as pro-choice as we might hope, the change in the guard should spell the end for the Child Interstate Abortion Notification Act. The law, which, among other things, criminalizes anyone other than a parent assisting a minor to get an abortion across state lines, passed both houses earlier this year, but it’s currently in committee for reconciliation of varying language.

In the lame duck session, I would doubt the Republicans would move this measure along and get new votes on the reconciled bill in both houses. They’ve got more important things on their agenda for leaving a black mark on this country. And, when the new Congress comes to town next year, despite many Democrats having voted for the bill, it has lost at least 5 of its cosponsors and probably won’t see the light of day with the Democrats controlling the agenda in both houses. At least, that’s what we have to hope for.

– David S. Cohen

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So Now The U.S. Senate Will Be Lead By A Democrat Who Opposes Abortion

And via this NYT article we learn that upon hearing that Britney Spears had filed for divorce Harry Reid said: “She loses a little weight, and now she’s getting all cocky about things.”He added,”Britney has gotten her mojo back.”Ugh.

Thanks to Nancy Pelosi, my mojo is back too, though my butt is as ample as ever. Now we have to start fighting the Supposedly Liberal Dudes who care far more about power than reproductive rights or equality. In the blogosphere, on this issue it is us against people like this and this and this and this.

–Ann Bartow

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CFP: The Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law & Justice

From the Call for Submissions:  

We are seeking submissions for the 22nd volume of the Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law & Justice, to be published in the summer of 2007. Entries should be guided by the Journal’s unique editorial mandate which distinguishes it from other law reviews and feminist journals across the country. The Journal publishes research, analysis, and commentary that address the lives, struggles, and concerns of underrepresented voices in their experiences of gender. The Journal strongly believes that excellence in feminist legal scholarship requires critical examination of the intersection of gender with one or more other axes of subordination, including, but not limited to, race, class, sexual orientation, and disability. To be considered for publication, a submission must develop this gendered analysis through such an intersectional lens.

Articles should be double-spaced and should be sufficiently comprehensive to cover the topical substance explored by the work in appropriate depth. The Journal invites submissions from all who are interested, including, but not limited to professors and legal practitioners. Manuscripts will be accepted with the understanding that their content is unpublished previously. If any part of a paper has already been published, or is to be published elsewhere, the author must include this information at the time of submission.

Please use the Eighteenth edition of the Bluebook Uniform System of Citations for footnotes. Electronic copies are strongly preferred and should be sent to bwlj@socrates.berkeley.edu with a subject line reading”Article Submission.”For inquiries contact BGLJ Submissions Editors Justin Reinheimer or Iris Halpern at bwlj@socrates.berkeley.edu. Further information may be found on the Journal’s website, available at http://www.boalt.org/bwlj/index.html.

Call for Submissions Deadline: November 30th, 2006.

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Blogging Feminism: (Web)Sites of Resistance

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Of the Internet’s viability as a tool for political change, we ask, is there a better example than the blog? Young and youthfully minded feminists have learned that blogging allows them to carve out personal and political spaces where their lives, their issues, their analyses of the world can come into sharp focus. Outside the confines of mainstream media, where women are addressed (usually exclusively) as consumers, feminist bloggers have become the cultural producers blazing some of the most radical and rousing paths toward revolutionary social change.

This spring, The Scholar & Feminist Online, will publish issue 5.3 – “Blogging Feminism: (Web)Sites of Resistance.” On Tuesday, 14 November, guest editors Gwendolyn Beetham and Jessica Valenti come together with select contributors to discuss how feminists are fulfilling the promise of creating a cybercommunity dedicated to securing a more just and peaceful world. Panelists include Lauren Spees and Michelle Riblett, BC ’05 (Hollaback), Liza Sabater (Culture Kitchen), and Alice Marwick (Tiara). Join us for a spirited discussion of feminism in the 21st century.

This event is free and open to the public. We hope to see you there!

Barnard Center for Research on Women

phone: 212.854.2067
Update: Liveblogging account of this event by Liz Henry available here.
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Eleven (or More) Unpleasant Ways to Discover Anti-Woman Bias at Your Law School

A blog  reader  writes in with the following list of “Eleven (or More) Unpleasant Ways to Discover Anti-Woman Bias at Your Law School.”

1.   The school has no formal maternity leave or parental-leave policies, meaning the  Dean gets to decide how things will go, and favoritism often results in disparate “deals.”

2. Someone on the Faculty Appointments Committee says: (a) “Maybe if we hire more African-American women we can get rid of the ones we currently have — just kidding;” or (b) “This candidate is an articulate black woman.”  

3. At a faculty meeting, a professor states he wishes his African-American colleagues were not in the room, because there is “something” he “cannot say” when they are present.   When an African-American faculty member asks, “Do you want us to leave so you white people can talk amongst yourselves,” the initial speaker acts offended.

4.   Whenever a case involves an African-American plaintiff, an African-American student is called on by the professor to “give the black perspective.”   Or, every time the topic is rape, sexual harassment or anything gender-related, either all of the students that are called on are female, or none of them are.

5.   A colleague refers to someone as “the best female Contracts/Corporations/Tax/Securities Law/IP teacher I’ve ever met.”   Or, a colleague congratulates a female prof for getting tenure by informing her she “turned out really well for an affirmative action hire.”  

6.   A female professor disparages a male colleague for tolling his tenure clock after the birth of a child.  

7.   The students at the school don’t know there is an anti-discrimination policy that applies to all on-campus recruiters.   Or, students who report hiring violations by lawyers at big powerful firms get the cold shoulder from the Placement Office.

8.   The  GBLT student group has only two members, because no other GBLT students are willing to have their names on the group’s e-mail list. Or, the school doesn’t have a GBLT student group.   Or, a senior heterosexual professor insists upon being the group’s advisor so that s/he can show how open minded s/he is, despite massive evidence to the contrary, cough cough.

9.   A very senior colleague says (not in jest), “I’ve never heard of feminist legal theory. What is it?”  Or, when hearing that a faculty candidate is interested in feminist theory, a professor (a) proclaims that Catharine MacKinnon “is a twit;” or (b) asks if the candidate is married.    

10.   All of the school’s legal writing positions are held by women.   Or, mostly men are hired despite the fact that the applicant pool is overwhelming female.

11.   People of color who are “high-ranking” school administrators hold exclusively “supporting” positions, not policy-setting positions.   Or, people of color who work at the law school in non-faculty  positions fill only  faculty assistant  and/or janitorial roles.  

-Name withheld by request

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Melissa Summers Was a Poll Worker Yesterday

Or as she characterized it: Today I volunteered at the kid’s school in the position of “Person Who Asks, “Are you here to vote?” And Then Points Toward The Stairs.” Here is an excerpt from her account:

“Hi! Are you here to vote?”

Unpleasant Voter: “Oh, are you here to direct people to the polls?”

“Yes I am!” [Smile.]

Unpleasant Voter: “What they really need is someone directing people to the entrance of the building because it’s hard to find.”

“Ha! That’s so funny!” [But thinking: “Are you fucking kidding me? You can’t find the fucking entrance of a building? The big stone facade didn’t tip you off? The big sign saying, “Vote Here” with an arrow pointing toward the door didn’t tip you off? You’re going to vote right now? Seriously?”]

I would have guessed she lives in South Caroline like me, but in fact she was working a polling place in her home state of Michigan. In what I am sure is an extraordinary coincidence, today she is quoted in a fairly stupid NYT article about Mothers Who Drink During Playdates where she is a voice of reason. Her wonderful blog is called Suburban Bliss where the header features a “Momtini” and there is even a link to a Momtini Cafe Press store:
momtini.jpg

–Ann Bartow

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Great Resource for Academic Feminists: The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Online

Availabe here, it has 79 entries on “Feminism.” Here is an excerpt from a sample entry written by Judy Whipps:

Pragmatist Feminism:

American Pragmatist philosophy, and part of the energy of that resurgence may be due to feminist interest in pragmatism. Before discussing how feminists have transformed pragmatist discussion, it is necessary to briefly look at some of the basic themes in pragmatism. What is now called “classical” American pragmatism is a grouping of philosophies that were developed from the late nineteenth through the early twentieth century, and were largely influential in the Progressive Era (1890-1915) and up until the Second World War. Pragmatists, such as John Dewey, William James and Jane Addams, were interested in the intersection of theory and practice, bringing philosophic thinking into relationship with the social and political environment. For these thinkers, philosophizing was an active process, both as a way to change social realities and to use experience to modify the philosophies themselves. Early pragmatists were often humanists; they saw the social environment as malleable, capable of improvement through human action and philosophic thought. Because of this, many of the classical pragmatists were engaged in social action, often participating in experiments in education and working for egalitarian social reforms. Both early and contemporary pragmatists reject the idea of a certain Truth that can be discovered through logical analysis or revelation, and are more interested in knowledge gained through experiences of all sorts, while emphasizing the social context of all epistemological claims. Because of this understanding of knowledge as shaped by multiple experiences, pluralism has been a central value in pragmatism.

Contemporary studies in pragmatism and feminism generally combine a historical and a theoretical/methodological approach. Feminist pragmatists are working to recover the history and ideas of women philosophers who were influential in the development and articulation of classical American pragmatism. This approach brings into view the lives and philosophies of thinkers and activists such as Jane Addams, Jessie Taft, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Emily Greene Balch, Lucy Sprague Mitchell, Anna Julia Cooper, Mary Whiton Caulkins, and Ella Flagg Young. These women bring added dimensions to pragmatism and remind us of the issues that were subsequently left behind as American philosophy became more exclusively technical and academic. In the pragmatist tradition, it is particularly significant to understand the cultural and philosophic context of ideas, since pragmatists understand theorizing as part of one’s interaction with environment. It then becomes essential to recover the voices of the women who were involved in the early pragmatist dialogue. For the women of this era, their pragmatism was a philosophic practice used to accommodate their new academic and political engagement with the world, as well as a method of reforming politics and culture. The pragmatist approach to philosophy that brought theory and practice together helped these women trust and learn from their own experiences and to be intellectually engaged with their social reform movement.

Thanks to Patrick Seamus for this!

Update: Searching “feminist” results in 102 entries, many of which unsurprisingly overlap with “feminism.”

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HPV Vaccination Recommended For Women Up To Age 26

According to this article, some doctors are failing to inform young women up to age 26 that they should be vaccinated, and some insurance companies are refusing to cover the cost. Information from the CDC about this issue is available here. At this page the CDC specifically notes: The HPV vaccine is recommended for 11-12 year-old girls, and can be given to girls as young as 9. The vaccine is also recommended for 13-26 year-old girls/women who have not yet received or completed the vaccine series.

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