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
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Page 35
... liberty to follow the ordinary callings . Later that innocuous generality was expanded into the dogma , Liberty of Contract . Con- tract is not specially mentioned in the text that we have to construe . It is merely an ex- ample of ...
... liberty to follow the ordinary callings . Later that innocuous generality was expanded into the dogma , Liberty of Contract . Con- tract is not specially mentioned in the text that we have to construe . It is merely an ex- ample of ...
Page 42
... liberty and prohibits the deprivation of liberty without due process of law . In prohibiting that deprivation the Constitution does not recognize an abso- lute and uncontrollable liberty . Liberty in each of its phases has its history ...
... liberty and prohibits the deprivation of liberty without due process of law . In prohibiting that deprivation the Constitution does not recognize an abso- lute and uncontrollable liberty . Liberty in each of its phases has its history ...
Page 406
... liberty interest itself . For if the liberty to make certain decisions with respect to contraception without govern- mental constraint is " fundamental , " it is not only because those decisions are " serious " and " important " to the ...
... liberty interest itself . For if the liberty to make certain decisions with respect to contraception without govern- mental constraint is " fundamental , " it is not only because those decisions are " serious " and " important " to the ...
Contents
Early Interpretations of Due Process | 3 |
Substantive Due Process | 19 |
18681975 | 66 |
Copyright | |
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abortion adoption appellant appellee applied argument basis benefits Boren burden Califano challenged child claim classification 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 excluded exemption fact federal female fetus Fifth Amendment Fourteenth Amendment Frontiero fundamental gender gender-based governmental Griswold Hyde Amendment interest judgment JUSTICE BRENNAN JUSTICE POWELL JUSTICE REHNQUIST justify Kahn legislative legislature legitimate liberty majority male married ment mother opinion parents percent persons physician preg pregnancy prohibition purpose question reason Reed registration regulation relationship require rule scrutiny sex discrimination sexual sexual intercourse Shevin similarly situated spouses stat State's statute 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