by Christine Marlet | Apr 18, 2021
Can a legal system take into account all perspectives, resulting in a desirable full and balanced law, while excluding half of humanity from its development? Positively formulated, what do women bring to the law? Throughout these pages, the author sets out to answer these and other questions related to women and the Law. To do so, she begins by explaining some of the reasons for the absence of women jurists from the 2nd century to the end of the 19th century. From there, she goes on to examine the history of the first women jurists in the United States of America and Spain: who were they, what support did they have and what difficulties did they encounter, did they share the same aspirations, what were their contributions to Law? The aim of this work is to contribute, through the knowledge of women who paved the way, to the writing of that work, still incomplete, which is Women in History.
by Christine Marlet | May 14, 2019
Since Mª Ascension Chirivella graduated in 1922 from the Law School of the University of Valencia, the presence of women in law schools has continued
to increase, and women now constitute a majority in all universities. But, upon analyzing whether the majority presence of women in universities is
reflected in legal practice, we see that it does not.
by Christine Marlet | Mar 26, 2019
Piedad de la Cierva earned her degree in Sciences from the University of Valencia in 1932. That same year she moved to Madrid to prepare her thesis at the prestigious Rockefeller Institute.
by Christine Marlet | Mar 26, 2019
Piedad de la Cierva earned her degree in Sciences from the University of Valencia in 1932. That same year she moved to Madrid to prepare her thesis at the prestigious Rockefeller Institute.
by Christine Marlet | Mar 26, 2019
In 1988 two American historians, Bonnie S. Anderson and Judith P. Zinsser, wrote a book History of women, a story of their own. Among other things, the book highlighted a need that had begun to be claimed few years before: the obligation to reread history in a feminine key, giving women the real role, they have played.
Commentaires récents