by Jennifer C. Braceras | Jul 3, 2020 | Law, P.C., Race & Gender
The National Review | Law & The Courts | July 3, 2020 Until our leaders stand up and speak out against our self-appointed speech police, no one will be safe. Our Founders sought to protect federal judges from the whims of the mob by granting them life tenure, and...
by Jennifer C. Braceras | Jun 23, 2020 | Law, National, Race & Gender
The Hill | Op-Ed | June 23, 2020 Tennis legend Martina Navratilova, the winner of 18 Grand Slam singles titles, has noted that, when it comes to competitive athletics, “sex segregation is the only way to achieve equality for girls and women.” That is because, on...
by Jennifer C. Braceras | Apr 28, 2020 | Education, Law, National
The Hill | Opinion | April 28, 2020 The novel coronavirus has forced a generation of college students to put life on hold. And while these students and their parents may have made peace with online learning for the remainder of the semester, many are unprepared to...
by Jennifer C. Braceras | Mar 17, 2020 | Law, National, Race & Gender
CommonWealth Magazine | Opinion | March 17, 2020 Federal lawsuits seek to resolve issue once and for all Forty-eight years ago, the world was a very different place for women. In 1972, sexual harassment was not considered to be a form of illegal discrimination; Title...
by Jennifer C. Braceras | Jan 2, 2020 | Education, Law, Politics, Race & Gender
The Boston Globe | Op-Ed | January 2, 2020 A survey suggests that attempts to address sexual assault on campus, although well intentioned, have done so at the expense of fairness, and, in many cases, the truth. Last summer, Yale University settled a lawsuit by...
by Jennifer C. Braceras | Nov 7, 2019 | America, Law, Politics
The Boston Globe | Op-Ed | November 7, 2019 Many commentators are breathlessly reporting that America is on the brink of a constitutional crisis. They’re right, but not in the sense that they imagine. Political scientists and law professors define a “constitutional...