Sex Worker, Not Prostitute

I first heard about using the term “sex worker” instead of “prostitute” while listening to an episode of “My Favorite Murder”,112 – Our Bodies, Our Twelves, My Favorite Murder (Apr. 14, 2016) (downloaded using iTunes). a true-crime comedy podcast, demonstrating how… Read More

No Status, No Hope: Women Refugees in Israel

Women refugees are one of the most marginalized populations in the world. As with all asylum seekers, women refugees face persecution both in their home country and their host country because of their status and identity. The situation is even worse in Israel, which continues to deny refugee status to… Read More

Title IX Lawsuits as a Strategy for Integrating Fraternities

  In February, three undergraduate women attending Yale filed a class-action lawsuit in federal court requesting a court order that Yale-affiliated fraternities allow women to join. The plaintiffs allege that the exclusively male fraternities create a hostile environment on campus for women and that, by excluding women, only men can… Read More

Shame Punishments for Perpetrators of Domestic Violence

In a surprising trend, judges in the late 1990s increasingly issued “shame sanctions,” punishments which cause a person to feel lessor in relation to other members of society.1See Toni M. Massaro, Shame, Culture, and American Criminal Law, 89 Mich. L. Rev. Read More

“Stealthing” is Sexual Assault, Let’s Start Saying it in Court

“Stealthing,” the act of non-consensually removing one’s condom during sex, came to my attention in 2017 when the issue went viral in the online-feminist space. The fact that this act has a name immediately signaled to me its grotesque ubiquity. More than just an assaultive practice, stealthing is a community. Read More