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About
The UCLA Journal of Gender & Law (formerly the UCLA Women's Law Journal), established in 1989, is dedicated to the critical analysis of gender as it is structured and reinforced by the law and legal institutions. Integral to this mission is the promotion of scholarship that attends to the ways that race, class, ability, sexuality, nationality, religion, and other forms of marginalization constitute and intersect with gender as a lived and legal reality. We strive to incorporate critiques of the law as a tool of oppression, as well as solutions for collective liberation that operate within and beyond the law.
Volume 6, Issue 2, 1996
Symposium: Institutional Barriers to Women in the Workplace
Symposium
Equality, of the Right Sort
[No abstract]
Protection, Patriarchy, and Capitalism: The Politics and Theory of Gender-Specific Regulation in the Workplace
[No abstract]
Women, Families, Work, and Poverty: A Cloudy Future
[No abstract]
Searching for the Logic behind Welfare Reform
[No abstract]
Do Deans Discriminate: An Examination of Lower Salaries Paid to Women Clinical Teachers
[No abstract]
Afterword: Dismantling Institutional Barriers
[No abstract]