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About
The UCLA Women's Law Journal was an academic legal journal dedicated to using the power of language to educate people and amplify women's voices. It focused on the common struggles of women and celebrated diversity as a strength in feminist legal scholarship. Through its commitment to diversity, the journal aimed to represent the reality of all women's lives and experiences, without separating voices into exclusionary categories.
As of Volume 29, UCLA Women's Law Journal is continued by the UCLA Journal of Gender and 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]