Columbia Journal of Gender and Law

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from January 2002
Last Number: March 2023

Columbia University -- JGL
ISSN 1062-6220


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 406

September 22, 2006

  • The modern mulatto: a comparative analysis of the social and legal positions of mulattoes in the antebellum south and the intersex in contemporary America.

  • Assisting and empowering women facing natural disasters: drawing from Security Council resolution 1325.

  • Zimbabwe's Magaya decision revisited: women's rights and land succession in the international context.

  • Gendered subjects of transitional justice.

  • Political violence and gender during times of transition.

  • Commissioning the truth.

  • Normalizing violence: transitional justice and the Gujarat riots.

  • September 22, 2007

  • The subtle side of sexism.

  • Subtly sexist language.

  • Perceiving subtle sexism: mapping the social-psychological forces and legal narratives that obscure gender bias.

  • June 22, 2007

  • Gary Becker, legal feminism, and the costs of moralizing care.

  • The daddy double-bind: how the family and medical leave act perpetuates sex inequality across all class levels.

  • Legal pluralism and women's rights: a study in postcolonial Tanzania.

  • Love, honor, or control: domestic violence, trafficking, and the question of how to regulate the mail-order bride industry.

  • September 01, 2003

  • Why a Feminist Law Journal? A call for parity.

  • A brief history of gender law journals: the heritage of Myra Bradwell's Chicago Legal News.

  • A journal of one's own? Beginning the project of historicizing the development of women's law journals.

  • I Know It When I See It, or what makes scholarship feminist: A Cautionary Tale.

  • Feminist legal scholarship: charting topics and authors, 1978-2002.

  • Proliferation.

  • Diversity, discourse, and the mission of the feminist law journal.

  • Moving the margins.

  • Why a duck? Are feminist legal journals an endangered species, and if so, are they worth saving?

  • Cultivating feminist critical inquiry.

  • Women law journals in the new millennium: how far have they evolved? And are they still necessary?

  • Two "colored" women's conversation about the relevance of feminist law journals in the twenty-first century.

  • Embracing complexity: human rights in critical race feminist perspective.

  • Feminist law journals and the rankings conundrum.

  • Tenure politics and the feminist scholar.

  • Not whistlin' Dixie: now, more than ever, we need feminist law journals.

  • Converted or unconverted: to whom shall we preach?

  • Lessons about autonomy and integration from international human rights, law journals, and the world of golf.

  • Form, function, and feminist law journals.

  • The rights of women in international human rights law textbooks: segregation, integration, or omission?

  • Gender, sexuality, and power: is feminist theory enough?

  • On discipline and canon.

  • Journals as a feminist playground.

  • Looking in the honest mirror of privilege: "polite white" reflections.

  • Speaking volumes: musings on the issues of the day, inspired by the memory of Mary Joe Frug.

  • December 22, 2004

  • Operating in an empirical vacuum: the Ellerth and Faragher affirmative defense.

  • A woman scorned for the "least condemned" war crime: precedent and problems with prosecuting rape as a serious war crime in the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.

  • Here comes the Brides' March: cultural appropriation and Latina activism.

  • Women taking the lead in law and law firms: panel presentation by Columbia Law Women's Association, March 29, 2004.

  • September 22, 2008

  • Family law cases as law reform litigation: unrecognized parents and the story of Alison D. v. Virginia M.

  • The cultural property claim within the same-sex marriage controversy.

  • The Equal Rights Amendment: then and now.

  • Should a trip from Illinois to Tennessee change a woman into a man? Proposal for a Uniform Interstate Sex Reassignment Recognition Act.

  • The imprecise draftsmanship of the Lautenberg Amendment and the resulting problems for the judiciary.

  • January 01, 2006

  • Sexuality and the law: introduction to the issue.

  • Daniel Hernandez and Nevin Cohen, Lauren Abrams and Donna Freemantweed, Michael Elsasser and Douglas Robinson, Mary Jo Kennedy and Jo-Ann Shain, and Daniel Reyes and Curtis Woolbright, plaintiffs-respondents--against--Victor L. Robles, in his official capacity as city clerk of the City of New York, defendant-appellant.