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9 Essential Books About Women's Rights You Should Read Before National Women's History Month Is Over
9 Essential Books About Women's Rights You Should Read Before National Women's History Month Is Over
National Women's History Month might be coming to an end, but that doesn't mean you don't have time to celebrate, learn about, and give a voice to women across the country. There are so many different ways to celebrate National Women's History…
·bustle.com·
9 Essential Books About Women's Rights You Should Read Before National Women's History Month Is Over
2021 Rise: A Feminist Book Project List
2021 Rise: A Feminist Book Project List
Since 2002, Rise: A Feminist Book Project (formerly the Amelia Bloomer Project) has created an annual booklist of the best feminist books for young readers, ages birth through 18. We are part of the Feminist Task Force of the Social Responsibilities Round Table of the American Library Association. 2020 challenged all of us. A pandemic physically separated us. In the midst of loss, isolation, and injustice, we forged new paths of togetherness. We created new models of community. We developed new tools. We connected with our loved ones virtually. We took to the streets in protest.
·ala.org·
2021 Rise: A Feminist Book Project List
Supreme Court Voter
Supreme Court Voter
Our democracy is hanging in the balance. It’s time to fight back.
·supremecourtvoter.org·
Supreme Court Voter
Harris bursts through another barrier, becoming the first female, first Black and first South Asian vice president-elect | CNN Politics
Harris bursts through another barrier, becoming the first female, first Black and first South Asian vice president-elect | CNN Politics
Kamala Harris, who on Saturday became America's first female, first Black and first South Asian vice president-elect, represents a new face of political power after an election all about who wields power and how they use it.
·cnn.com·
Harris bursts through another barrier, becoming the first female, first Black and first South Asian vice president-elect | CNN Politics
The Jabot
The Jabot
We are an offshoot of the Above the Law legal blog. But we are focused on the challenges women, people of color, LGBTQIA, and other diverse populations face in the legal industry. Let's be real -- it can suck out there. So we want to create a space where our community can come together share stories, find support and devise strategies. Our name comes from none other than the Notorious Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the jabot (decorative collar) she wears when delivering dissents from the bench. It's a reminder that --even when we aren't winning, we're still a powerful force to be reckoned with.
·atlthejabot.libsyn.com·
The Jabot
Dissenting Opinions
Dissenting Opinions
Welcome to Dissenting Opinions, a new podcast by the Constitutional Law Institute at the University of Chicago Law School. Hosted by Will Baude, each episode will have top legal minds discuss a Supreme Court case they believe is misunderstood -- with special episodes of a "deep dive" into a legal topic.
·dissenting-opinions.simplecast.com·
Dissenting Opinions
Dissed Podcast
Dissed Podcast
Dissents have it all: brilliant writing, surprising reasoning, shade, puns, and sometimes historical impact. Although the “losing side” writes them, they’re still important: they can provide a roadmap for future challenges or persuade other justices. Sometimes they’re just cathartic. In Dissed, attorneys Anastasia Boden and Elizabeth Slattery dig deep into important dissents, both past, and present, and reveal the stories behind them.
·pacificlegal.org·
Dissed Podcast
Common Law
Common Law
This season, four UVA Law professors are returning as co-hosts with Dean Risa Goluboff, bringing their diverse experiences to the table as “Co-Counsel.” Danielle K. Citron, John C. Harrison, Cathy Hwang and Gregory Mitchell are helping to choose guests and topics for the show, and will rotate co-hosting duties.
·law.virginia.edu·
Common Law