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Constitutional Orphan - Gender Equality and the Nineteenth Amendment (Hardcover)
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Constitutional Orphan - Gender Equality and the Nineteenth Amendment (Hardcover)
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In Constitutional Orphan, Professor Paula Monopoli explores the
significant role of former suffragists in the constitutional
development of the Nineteenth Amendment the woman suffrage
amendment ratified in 1920. She sheds new light on the connection
between the suffragists as institutional actors in civil society
and the emergence of a "thin" conception of the Nineteenth
Amendment as a mere nondiscrimination in voting rule, rather than a
robust equality norm. In this compelling legal history, Monopoli
illuminates how the Nineteenth had implications for federalism,
women's citizenship and the definition of equality, as well as how
gender, race and class intersect to affect our constitutional
development. Monopoli explores the choice by both the National
Woman's Party and the National American Woman Suffrage Association
to turn away from African American suffragists who were denied the
vote even after ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment. Using
original sources, legislative history and case analysis, she
develops a persuasive theory connecting that moral and strategic
failure to the emergence of a narrow interpretation of the
amendment. Monopoli also evaluates the impact of class divisions
among former suffragist allies. These divisions around support for
the NWP's Equal Rights Amendment, found social feminists opposing
that "blanket" amendment for fear of its impact on the
constitutional validity of protective labor legislation for
working-class women. Monopoli details how many state courts, left
without federal enforcement legislation to guide them, used strict
construction to cabin the emergence of a more robust interpretation
of the Nineteenth Amendment, as a broad equality norm. She
concludes with an examination of new legal scholarship that
suggests ways in which such a robust understanding of the
Nineteenth Amendment could be used today to expand gender equality.
In this compelling legal history, Monopoli illuminates how gender,
race and class intersect to affect our constitutional development.
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