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DOES THE U.S. CONSTITUTION NEED AN ERA? (Revised version of a paper delivered at the 2004 annual meeting of the Law & Society Association, Chicago, IL.) Lisa Baldez For over three decades, those engaged in the battle over the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), along with many scholarly commentators, have argued that ratification of the Amendment will lead U.S. courts to reach many more decisions in favor of litigants alleging discrimination. An ERA could accomplish this end in one of two ways: directly, by prompting judges to take a more skeptical view of sex-based discrimination or, as is more typically argued, indirectly, by leading judges (1) to elevate the standard of law they now use to adjudicate claims of sex discrimination, which, in turn, could lead them (2) to find in favor of parties claiming a denial of their rights. We investigate both possibilities via an examination of constitutional sex discrimination litigation in the fifty statesover a third of which have adopted ERAs. Click here for the article (.pdf file) |
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