In a new twist on criminal sympathy, Professor April Miller argued that murder may serve as a means of female resistance against the “patriarchal machinery” that is the law.
News
Ecofeminist Perspectives
At the 2007 Modern Language Association Convention, Panelist Elizabeth McNeil of Arizona State University defined the goals of ecofeminism.
Roe v. Wade Goes Global
There is a trend visible in the international community as the right to abortion slowly becomes international law, a report issued last fall by the Catholic Family & Human Rights Institute (CFHRI) shows.
Rocking The Vote
With primaries in full swing and the November elections drawing near, a seemingly unlikely constituency is being given an increasing amount of attention.
Clemson Lawsuit
A lawsuit filed by a former Clemson University advisor alleges that he was fired after raising questions over the school’s increased tuition.
Economic Redistribution Ahead
The ongoing concern that climate change initiatives mask a concerted attempt to initiate global economic redistribution was bolstered by the Bali Conference.
Ford Foundation Underwrites Diversicrats
Believe it or not, a left-leaning foundation has taken notice of the risk to free speech on American college campuses.
Greening Title IX?
In their ongoing quest to see who can be most politically correct, Ohio university administrators have devised an intercollegiate competition that can literally qualify as a trash sport.
Erykah Badu in the Classroom
Interdisciplinary writing may offer a way to overcome value judgments and examine literature from “multiple perspectives” incorporating social, political, and economic factors, argues Professor Akua Duku Anokye
Buried Alive In Bolivia
Lynched, stoned and buried alive; these are just some of the ways that people have been punished in recent years by indigenous, communal judges in the South American country of Bolivia.