Now showing items 1-6 of 6

    • McKanders, Karla Mari (Boston University International Law Journal, 2014)
      During the Arab Spring, Moroccan men and women first took to the streets on February 20, 2011 to demand governmental reforms. Their movement became known as the Mouvement du 20-Février. In a series of protests, Moroccans ...
    • Hans, G.S. (Clinical Law Review, 2019)
      The demographics of clinical law faculties matter. As Professor Jon Dubin persuasively argued nearly twenty years ago in his article Faculty Diversity as a Clinical Legal Education Imperative, clinical faculty of color ...
    • Clarke, Jessica A. (Duke Law Journal, 2013)
      In the course of debates over same-sex marriage, many scholars have proposed new legal definitions of sexual orientation to better account for the role of relationships in constituting identities. But these discussions ...
    • Jones, Owen D. (Harvard Journal of Law & Technology, 1992)
      The debate over the prohibition of sex (or gender) selection (also known as "preselection" or "predetermination"), has focused almost exclusively on the context of aborting a "wrong-sex" fetus after a fetal gender-identification ...
    • Clarke, Jessica (Harvard Law Review, 2019)
      Nonbinary gender identities have quickly gone from obscurity to prominence in American public life, with growing acceptance of gender-neutral pronouns, such as “they, them, and theirs,” and recognition of a third gender ...
    • Hersch, Joni; Meyers, Erin E. (Marquette Law Review, 2019)
      Despite the fact that women are leaving the practice of law at alarmingly high rates, most previous research finds no evidence of gender differences in job satisfaction among lawyers. This Article uses nationally representative ...