The Constitutional Rights of Women: Cases in Law and Social ChangeUniversity of Wisconsin Press, 1988 - 637 pages Goldstein provides a legal casebook examining women's constitutional rights as determined by U.S. Supreme Court decisions. This revised and updated edition of her 1979 work contains cases through the 1987 Supreme Court term. The cases discuss women's rights and 20th-century civil rights concepts equal protection of the laws, discriminatory practices, and privacy. The analysis traces the interactions between social change movements and the law and gives careful attention to concurring and dissenting opinions. This book is highly recommended for persons interested in law, social movements, and civil rights dimensions in our society. Steven Puro, St. Louis Univ. Copyright 1988 Cahners Business Information. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 90
Page 113
... established in favor of males by § 15-314 of the Idaho Code can- not stand in the face of the Fourteenth Amendment's command that no state deny the equal protection of the laws to any per- son within its jurisdiction . Idaho does not ...
... established in favor of males by § 15-314 of the Idaho Code can- not stand in the face of the Fourteenth Amendment's command that no state deny the equal protection of the laws to any per- son within its jurisdiction . Idaho does not ...
Page 197
... established that parents may send their children to private schools ( subject however to appropriate accreditation requirements of the state ) , and the other ' established the parental right to have one's child study a foreign language ...
... established that parents may send their children to private schools ( subject however to appropriate accreditation requirements of the state ) , and the other ' established the parental right to have one's child study a foreign language ...
Page 214
... established a familial tie with the child by marrying the mother , is often a total stranger from the State's point of view . I do not understand the Court to question these pragmatic differences . An unwed fa- ther who has not come ...
... established a familial tie with the child by marrying the mother , is often a total stranger from the State's point of view . I do not understand the Court to question these pragmatic differences . An unwed fa- ther who has not come ...
Contents
Early Interpretations of Due Process | 3 |
Substantive Due Process | 19 |
18681975 | 66 |
Copyright | |
15 other sections not shown
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abortion adoption Amendment appellant applied argued argument basis benefits burden challenged child claim classification compelling concern conclude concurring Congress considered constitutional criminal decide decision denied dependent determine discrimination dissenting distinction District due process effect employees Equal Protection Clause established excluded fact father federal female Fourteenth Amendment fundamental gender gender-based held hold important interest involved issue judgment jury JUSTICE justify legislative legislature legitimate less liberty limited majority male married matter means ment military mother natural necessary objective opinion parents percent persons pregnancy present prohibition question reason recognized Reed regulation relationship require respect result rule Senate serve situated social State's statute statutory substantial supra Supreme Court tion Title treat treatment United violation widows woman women