Catalog Search Results
Author
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Pub. Date
2016.
Description
"The 1964 Civil Rights Act is best known as a monumental achievement of the civil rights movement, but it also revolutionized the lives of American women. Title VII of the law made it illegal to discriminate "because of sex." But Congress gave little guidance about how much it wanted to change in a "Mad Men" world where women played mainly supporting roles. It was up to the Supreme Court, then, to endow that simple phrase with meaning, and its decisions...
Author
Publisher
The New Press
Pub. Date
2022.
Description
"A sweeping history of the federal legislation that prohibits sex discrimination in education, published on the fiftieth anniversary of Title IX"--
"By prohibiting sex discrimination in federally funded education, the 1972 legislation popularly known as Title IX profoundly changed the lives of millions in the United States, accelerating a movement for equal education in classrooms, on sports fields, and in all of campus life. 37 Words is the story...
4) Sexual justice: supporting victims, ensuring due process, and resisting the conservative backlash
Author
Publisher
Metropolitan Books, Henry Holt and Company
Pub. Date
2021.
Description
"A pathbreaking work for the #MeToo era, laying out a better response to sexual harms that includes due process for the accused"--
Allegation of sexual harassment set off a wave of questions- some posed in good faith, some distinctly not-- about the rights of the accused. The national conversation has grown polarized, inflamed by a public narrative that wrongly presents feminism and fair process as warring interests. Drawing on core principles of...
Author
Publisher
Harvard University Press
Pub. Date
2011
Description
"Informed in 1944 that she was 'not of the sex' entitled to be admitted to Harvard Law School, African American activist Pauli Murray confronted the injustice she called 'Jane Crow.' In the 1960s and 1970s, the analogies between sex and race discrimination pioneered by Murray became potent weapons in the battle for women's rights, as feminists borrowed rhetoric and legal arguments from the civil rights movement. Serena Mayeri's Reasoning from Race...
Author
Publisher
Crown Archetype
Pub. Date
c2012
Description
In 1998, after the author had spent 19 grueling years working at a Goodyear plant, an anonymous note showed her that she made 40 per cent less than her male counterparts. So began her decade-long legal battle for equal pay, a story she tells movingly and frankly. After a hardscrabble childhood in a small Alabama community, she knew a job at the nearby Goodyear plant meant lifelong financial stability. In 1979 as a manager there, she found men reluctant...