Online Journal

JLG previously included an online journal, which published scholarship exclusively through our website. The online journal ceased publication in 2017. Today, we continue to publish articles and other forms of writing online as Creative Content initiative.

Articles, Online Journal

CRIMINAL JUSTICE FOR SURVIVORS: LESSONS FROM ONLINE REPORTING

Deborah Tuerkheimer* In Online Shaming and the Power of Informal Justice,[1] Hadar Dancig-Rosenberg and Anat Peleg examine a dynamic that has become ubiquitous since #MeToo sparked a global reckoning with sexual abuse.[2] Notwithstanding several high profile instances of both criminal[3] and civil[4] accountability, the #MeToo movement—as reflected in the hashtag—has been largely driven by the […]

Articles, Online Journal

Strategic Communications for Promoting School Sex Education Reform in Massachusetts to Combat Gender-Based Violence and Toxic Masculinity

By Harry Chiu **** H.673/S.318, “An Act Relative to Healthy Youth,” is a proposed Massachusetts bill that aims to reform sex education in K-12 schools. Based on current research in gender-based violence prevention in schools, this bill would be an impactful and positive step toward reducing gender-based violence in schools and promoting healthier gender identities

Articles, Online Journal

FAILING TO RECOGNIZE OBJECTIFICATION AND SEXUALIZATION OF WOMEN AS SYSTEMIC DISCRIMINATION: WORKPLACE HARASSMENT REFORMS IN AUSTRALIA

by Sandra Amankaviciute and Monika Zalnieriute   “Small Breasts, Huge Thighs and a Big Red Box.” No, this sexualized description is not of an X-rated video, but of Australia’s first female Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, made while she was in office in 2013. And it is not an anonymous troll tweet, but a menu displayed

Articles, Online Journal

Justice Amy Coney Barrett and What it Means to Have a Feminist Judiciary

By Shilpa Sadhasivam Watching the Supreme Court’s political bent swing from conservative-leaning to firmly conservative was a resounding blow to political leftists. The rapid replacement of revered feminist Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg with conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett created great anxiety regarding Roe v. Wade, Obergefell v. Hodges, and other civil rights issues. Even deeper, her confirmation

Articles, Online Journal

CRIMINALIZING PREGNANCY: WYOMING SEEKS TO PROSECUTE NEW MOTHER FOR DRUG USE DURING PREGNANCY UNDER EXISTENT STATE LAW

By Hannah Hubbard Wyoming charged Leigh Stewart with child endangerment six days after she gave birth to her baby in Cheyenne. The State alleged that Ms. Stewart violated state law W.S. § 6-4-403(b)(iv), which provides that “[n]o person shall knowingly…[s]ell, give or otherwise furnish a child any drug prohibited by law without a physician’s prescription.”

Online Journal

The U.S. Code and Implicitly Biased Language

“And when I meet Thomas Jefferson . . . I’m ‘a compel him to include women in the sequel!” – Angelica Schuyler[1] ********** The nation is beginning to reckon with darker features of its history. The grappling process has run the gamut from racism to LGBTQ+ discrimination. Thankfully, these conversations have extended to include systemic

Articles, Online Journal, Submissions, Symposia Articles, Title IX

Shaking the Tree: Using Advocacy to Push School Districts to Meet Their Obligations Under Title IX

In September 2018, I, like many women, was glued to my television watching Christine Blasey Ford testify about the indelible mark left by the sexual assault she had experienced as a high school student. For days, I kept thinking about her story and about all the stories that women like her had experienced and never

Online Journal

The Way Pavers: Eleven Supreme Court-worthy Women

by Meg Penrose Click here for a PDF of the entire Essay. Introduction Four women have served as associate justices on the United States Supreme Court. Since the Court’s inception in 1789, more than 160 individuals have been nominated to serve as Supreme Court justices.[1] Five nominees, or roughly 3 percent, have been women.[2] To

Articles, Online Journal

Reconsidering the Remedy of Gender Quotas

Tracy A. Thomas* Please click here for a PDF version of the article          When newly elected Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was asked by surprised reporters why he appointed women as 50% of his cabinet, he responded simply, “Because it’s 2015.”[1] Just because. Because it’s time. In fact, he implied, it is long past

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