

Frieda Kahlo Barbie from here.
Video here! I love women who aren’t afraid to look a little silly, and she seems to be having a lot of fun.
–Ann Bartow
Amananta has a long, link filled post here. I’m not a doctor so I can’t vouch for the linked information but I think it’s worth a read.
–Ann Bartow
Here. Below is a short excerpt:
The most moving part of her e-mail was her description of a visit to prostituted Iraqi girls in a Syrian prison.”I spoke to some of them,”Ms. Adel writes,”and they said they would rather be in prison than have to go back out there and get abused by Saudi, Kuwaiti, and other Gulf States men who still hold grudges against Iraq and find pleasure in abusing Iraqi women to make them pay for Iraq’s war against these Gulf States in 1991.”
–Ann Bartow
Head over to Historiann and help a sister out!
Here. I’m happy to see both Obama staffers and Hillary Clinton’s presence in the race getting credit for the positive developments the author describes. Via Bob C. with thanks.
–Ann Bartow
That’s the tagline of this New Republic article analyzing McCain’s stance on abortion and reproductive rights issues. The point of the article is that McCain, in furtherance of his deceptive “maverick” title, likes to obscure just how conservative he is on these issues. The article is an important one to read.
McCain’s views may matter especially to Hillary Clinton supporters, many of whom are pro-choice; according to syndicated columnist Froma Harrop, “[T]hey’ll want to know this: Would McCain stock the Supreme Court with foes of Roe v. Wade?” But, she writes, “The answer is unclear but probably ‘no.’ While McCain has positioned himself as ‘pro-life’ during this campaign, his statements over the years show considerable latitude on the issue.”
That, however, is simply not true. There is no “latitude” in McCain’s position on abortion. Interviews with dozens of people who have dealt with him on the issue–pro-choice and pro-life activists, Hill staffers, McCain confidants, pollsters, and staffers–along with a two-and-a-half-decade-long perfectly anti-abortion voting record, make that clear. And his record on related issues, like contraception, is no better. “I think it is outrageous that people give him a pass, as they gave George W. Bush a pass,” reflects Feldt. “John McCain will be that and worse.”
That voting record referred to is just awful:
During his political career, McCain has participated in 130 reproductive health-related votes on Capitol Hill; of these, he voted with the anti-abortion camp in 125. McCain has consistently backed rights for the unborn, voting to cover fetuses under the State Children’s Health Insurance Program and supporting the Unborn Victims of Violence Act, which allowed a “child in utero” to be recognized as a legal victim of a crime. He has voted in favor of the global gag rule, which prevents U.S. funds from going to international family-planning clinics that use their own money to perform abortions, offer information about abortion, or take a pro-choice stand.
****
McCain may or may not truly understand the broader definition of “pro-life,” which these days also includes opposition to traditional and emergency contraception, family-planning, euthanasia, and related federal funding both here and abroad. (Playing the bumbling fool and satisfying no one is certainly an easier escape than trying to satisfy all.) But, as on abortion, both data and anecdote show there is little latitude in his positions. He has voted to end the Title X family-planning program, which pays for everything from birth control to breast cancer screenings and which is a target for the right because the recipients of these dollars also tend to be clinics that offer contraception to unwed and underage women and that offer abortions. He has backed largely discredited abstinence-only education, voting in 1996 to take $75 million from the Maternal and Child Health Block Grant to establish such a program; ten years later, he voted against teen-pregnancyprevention programs. He has supported parental notification laws governing not only abortion but contraception for teens, and, though he didn’t want to talk to the press about it, he’s voted against requiring insurance companies to cover birth control. In international family affairs, McCain has voted not only in favor of the global gag rule, but also to defund the United Nations group that provides family-planning services (not abortions) for poor women, and to spend a third of overseas HIV/AIDS prevention funds on abstinence education.
Yup, pro-life zealot is pretty accurate.
– David S. Cohen
Crime. (Via.) Prospective help for the victim and people like her. (See also.) Support the Trafficking Victims Protection Act. Thank you and good night.
–Ann Bartow
ETA: See also.
Go ahead and drink that big bottle of water! Or beer if you prefer. No worries.
Interesting post here that discusses this new study, which has the following abstract:
A common gender stereotype assumes that men are more aggressive and women are more emotional. In negotiation, men are assumed to be more assertive and women better at fostering relationships. However, a new study published in Negotiation and Conflict Management Research reveals that when people are trying to make a positive impression, they may behave in ways that contradict gender stereotypes.
Jared Curhan of MIT’s Sloan School of Management and Jennifer Overbeck of the University of Southern California ‘s Marshall School of Business assigned 190 MBA students to same-sex groups to represent either a high-status recruiter or a low-status job candidate engaged in a standard employment negotiation simulation. Half of the participants were offered an additional cash incentive to make a positive impression on their negotiation counterparts.
When incentivized to make a positive impression on their counterparts, men and women in the high-status role acted in ways that contradicted gender stereotypes. Women negotiated more aggressively and men negotiated in a more appeasing manner. Being motivated to make a positive impression may have cued negotiators to counter whatever negative tendencies they believe others see in them and to thus display a contrasting demeanor.
Women who are motivated to make a positive impression, perhaps in an effort to refute the stereotype that they are weak or ineffective negotiators, may advocate more strongly for their own interests. In contrast, men who are motivated to make a positive impression, perhaps in an effort to refute the stereotype that they are overly aggressive, may yield to the demands of the other side.
The success of the strategies was mixed. Men’s strategy of behaving in a more conciliatory fashion apparently succeeded in producing a positive impression in the counterpart’s eyes. However, the women’s strategy of behaving more assertively failed to create a more positive impression. Instead, women who behaved more assertively, were judged more negatively.
“Our findings have long-term implications for how we teach negotiation,” the authors conclude. “Men who try to make a positive impression by being conciliatory risk forfeiting their own economic outcomes and women who try to make positive impressions by being assertive can risk damaging their relationships. Thus, men and women may benefit from different strategies when it comes to balancing the tension in negotiation between empathy and assertiveness.”
My own view is that you can’t negotiate yourself out of being female. If a dean offers you a smaller starting salary than similarly situated men, and refuses to budge, hoping that you will turn down the offer so he can then give the job to a man (while simultaneously complaining that he’s TRYING to hire more women but they just won’t play ball), it’s not because you are a bad negotiator. It’s because that dean is a scumbag.
–Ann Bartow
This is an edited transcript of Crafting a Scholarly Persona, the Scholarship Section’s program from the AALS Annual Meeting in 2007. During this program, three established scholars, Ian Ayres, Paul Robinson, and Carol Sanger, discussed their individual career paths – How they chose their article topics, what the goals of their scholarship are, how they view their research agendas, etc. The discussion was intended roughly to mirror Bravo’s Inside the Actor’s Studio.
Downloadable here. I attended that panel discussion and found it very thought provoking.
–Ann Bartow

Via. Below are pictures depicting the uniform of the male Brazilian volleyball players:


I have to think that if exposing your midriff and upper thighs helped you play better, the men would be doing it too. NB: Brazil is not unique in requiring female volleyball players to compete in bikinis, and this is in fact generally required by the rules.
–Ann Bartow
ETA: The Brazilian uniforms actually offer more coverage than those worn by Team USA:

Trojans have priority of use for ‘SC’ logo, says the administrative tribunal of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
August 8, 2008
The University of Southern California and the University of South Carolina share the same initials. But they won’t be sharing a trademark logo.
Not now that the administrative tribunal of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has ruled that the local USC has priority of use when it comes to the “SC” logo, including the interlocking version.
The battle between the USCs has been quietly raging since 2002, when USC challenged South Carolina’s application to federally register a version of the “SC” trademark for use on clothing and baseball uniforms. South Carolina fired back with a counterclaim to cancel USC’s federal trademark registration for its interlocking “SC” logo.
Game on. Proceedings before the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board began in 2006. On Friday, the board issued a 93-page order in favor of L.A.’s USC.
So, Dr. Arthur C. Bartner, are you ready to cue that Trojan Marching Band?
“It doesn’t really command the same amount of attention as winning a national championship,” said Liz Kennedy, director of USC’s trademarks and licensing program. “It was much more tedious.”
No word on whether the Bowl Championship Series computers could change the result.
The USPTO’s page on the dispute, with links to the relevant documents, is here. My USC got schooled, no question.
–Ann Bartow
As you probably guessed or already read elsewhere, that’s what John Edwards had to say about Bill Clinton during Clinton’s impeachment trial. To quote Ani DiFranco in 32 Flavors:
Squint your eyes and look closer
I’m not between you and your ambition
I am a poster girl with no poster
I am thirty-two flavors and then some
And I’m beyond your peripheral vision
So you might want to turn your head
Cause someday you might find you are hungry
And eating most of the words you just said
Edwards’ sex life doesn’t particularly interest me, but anybody who wants to be President better expect a lot of scrutiny, and it is very surprising that he didn’t anticipate disclosure of this aspect of his personal life. One requirement for having a private life is staying out of politics and show business, and of course even that is no guarantee, not even close.
–Ann Bartow
From Women’s Enews:
… “Violence against women is both a cause and consequence of HIV and AIDS,” said Ines Alberdi, executive director of UNIFEM, the United Nations Development Fund for Women, at a press conference preceding the international gathering, held in Latin America for the first time. “In order to successfully tackle AIDS, we must address violence against women. Both pandemics are intertwined in a vicious cycle.”
The U.N. General Assembly is set to vote in September on the creation of a unified women’s agency to streamline its fragmented approach to women’s issues and programs. Many activists say the new agency would strengthen the world body’s response to issues affecting women, including violence and AIDS. Several groups lobbied actively for the creation of this agency during the Aug. 3-8 conference.
On Thursday UNIFEM released a report detailing the lack of women’s involvement in anti-AIDS initiatives, even as they become more burdened by the pandemic, and offered a road map to increase female participation by making women key stakeholders in efforts to combat the spread of AIDS.
The feminization of AIDS has been well documented in sub-Saharan Africa, where two-thirds of the world’s HIV-positive people live and where the pandemic has taken its heaviest toll. Outside Africa the disease has affected more men than women and was once concentrated in populations of male drug users, men who have sex with men and sex workers.
But the percentage of infected women has risen steadily over the years. In the Caribbean region overall, the female-male ratio is now 1-to-1 among 230,000 infected people. In Haiti, which now has 170,000 HIV-positive people, unprotected heterosexual intercourse is the main driver of the pandemic.
Nearly one-third, or 32 percent, of newly diagnosed HIV infections and cases of AIDS in the United States stem from high-risk sexual intercourse, although male-to-male sex still remains the main transmission mode. In Western Europe, 42 percent of new infections are attributed to unprotected heterosexual sex. …
Read the whole thing here.
–Ann Bartow
This. And I’m cautiously optimistic that the post author has figured out that mainstream porn also has stock characters that are even more perniciously undermining women with minds and desires of their own.
–Ann Bartow
Because Al Brophy is both incredibly cool, and also a good friend, I think he will let me get away with pirating this post:
This morning’s CLIP service brings news that Janet Halley’s talk on becoming the Royall Chair at Harvard Law School has been published in the Harvard Blackletter Law Journal. There’s been much talk of late about Isaac Royall, who was an early benefactor of Harvard Law School. He built his fortune, using slave labor, on the sugar business in the West Indies. Professor Halley’s moving talk, where she asks what we make of this history, is available on the internet. She is introduced by Dean Kagan. I highly recommend it. Further evidence of how the past is being reshaped–and in ways that are extraordinary and (perhaps) unexpected.
–Ann Bartow
Around 1995 the song “Macarena” and its associative dance became extremely popular (and still culturally resonates). Watch this video, and note that all the women are young, thin, beautiful, and very scantily clad. The men, however, are ordinary looking, and wearing baggy suits. Take a guess which of the folks in the video made by far the most money from “Macarena.”
–Ann Bartow
Edited to add: UGH.
Long, detailed post here at Neuroanthropology.
That’s just one sentence from this NYT Op-Ed about Woman’s [Girls] Gymnastics, entitled “Creep Show.”
ETA: Ouch.
Abstract:
This paper analyzes testimony about forced prostitution voiced in New York City’s Court of General Sessions from 1908 to 1915. During these years, the problem of coercive prostitution – commonly called”white slavery”– received an unprecedented amount of attention from journalists, politicians, and anti-vice activists. Drawing from verbatim trial transcripts of 31 compulsory prostitution trials, our research explores the cultural and legal fabric used to represent and evaluate sexual consent. We argue that legal facts are created through a quadripartite storytelling process where judges and jurors play a constitutive role in how the defense and prosecution create their trial narratives. Through an analysis of story framing in compulsory prostitution cases, we contend that the white slavery narrative served as a cultural resource for legal actors to understand and articulate arguments about commercial sex.
Full text available here.
So says Christian Lander, author of Stuff White People Like, in this interview.
Series framing post here. Interesting posts include:
llinois Governor Rod Blagojevich (D) signed a measure into law that allows authorities to track convicted domestic violence offenders via satellite using GPS technology. The new law allows judges to order that offenders wear a GPS device or be subject to GPS monitoring. Authorities will be alerted when abusers enter survivor-designated safe zones, typically areas surrounding their home or workplace.
The family of Cindy Bischof fought for a law in her name that would allow authorities to track offenders who have previously violated orders of protection. Bischof, 43, was killed outside her office in March by her ex-boyfriend, Michael L. Giroux. He had been arrested and prosecuted for violating a restraining order twice before the fatal shooting. Bischof had requested that Giroux be monitored using GPS after his release from prison, but this type of surveillance was not a legal possibility at the time.
Diane Rosenfeld, a lawyer who worked to add GPS monitoring to Massachusetts state law, told Ms. Magazine that a key aspect of GPS legislation is that it places responsibility for following orders of protection on the offender rather than the victim. Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich stated that “with this legislation, we will further help victims of domestic violence by monitoring their abusers whereabouts and aiding law enforcement in tracking violations of a restraining order.”