The Constitutional Rights of Women: Cases in Law and Social ChangeUniv of Wisconsin Press, 1988 - 637 pages Using a wide variety of cases involving women's rights, Leslie Friedman Goldstein examines the ways in which the U.S. Supreme Court initiates and responds to social change. This edition covers all major Supreme Court decisions that affect gender equity and reproductive rights through May 1987. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 28
Page 1
... establish a demonstration program to facilitate landscape restoration programs within certain units of the National Park System established by law to preserve and interpret resources associated with American history , and for other ...
... establish a demonstration program to facilitate landscape restoration programs within certain units of the National Park System established by law to preserve and interpret resources associated with American history , and for other ...
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Page 6
... established these courts in 1968 to handle cases involving members of the security services and the police force . Their structure and procedures are similar to those of the civil and military courts , with the right to appeal to the ...
... established these courts in 1968 to handle cases involving members of the security services and the police force . Their structure and procedures are similar to those of the civil and military courts , with the right to appeal to the ...
Page 2
... established by a vote of 5 to 4 . I would like it understood at the beginning that there is no con- stitutional provision that requires this to be done . It is purely a doctrine established by the Supreme Court . Congress can change the ...
... established by a vote of 5 to 4 . I would like it understood at the beginning that there is no con- stitutional provision that requires this to be done . It is purely a doctrine established by the Supreme Court . Congress can change the ...
Page 171
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Contents
Early Interpretations of Due Process | 3 |
Substantive Due Process | 19 |
18681975 | 66 |
the Streets | 83 |
Sex as a Semisuspect Classification | 109 |
Gender and More Rigid Scrutiny | 165 |
Webster 1977 | 192 |
Revolutionizing Marriage | 232 |
Women Procreation and the Right of Privacy | 298 |
3 | 348 |
Congressional Enforcement of Equal Protection | 498 |
Note on Comparable Worth | 537 |
Epilogue | 585 |
Timetable of Womens Rights Cases | 601 |
How the Supreme Court Operates | 613 |
Postscript 1989 | 631 |
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Common terms and phrases
abortion adoption appellant appellee applied argument basis benefits Boren Brennan burden Califano challenged child claim combat compelling conclude concurring Congress consent constitutional right constitutionally contraceptives Craig criminal decision denied disability dissenting District Court draft Due Process Clause employees Equal Protection Clause fact federal female fetus Fifth Amendment Fourteenth Amendment Frontiero fundamental gender governmental Griswold Hyde Amendment interest judgment jury JUSTICE BRENNAN JUSTICE POWELL JUSTICE REHNQUIST justify Kahn legislative legislature legitimate liberty majority male married ment military mother opinion parents percent persons physician preg pregnancy prohibition purpose question reason Reed registration regulation relationship require rule scrutiny sex discrimination sexual Shevin similarly situated spouses stat State's statute statutory rape statutory scheme strict scrutiny substantial substantive due process supra tion tional Title VII treatment U.S. Supreme Court unconstitutional unmarried unwed fathers violation widows Wiesenfeld woman women