Search for: "Felice Batlan" Results 1 - 20 of 83
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4 Jan 2011, 8:50 am
Felice Batlan (left) as today's guest blogger. [read post]
6 Dec 2010, 7:52 am by Mary L. Dudziak
Law in the Time of Cholera: Disease, State Power, and Quarantines Past and Future has just been posted by Felice Batlan, Illinois Institute of Technology - Chicago-Kent College of Law. [read post]
2 Mar 2012, 12:00 pm by Karen Tani
image creditWe want to take a moment to say thank you to Professor Felice Batlan, our terrific guest blogger for the month of February.To highlight just a few of her contributions, she spotlighted emerging scholarship on gender, race and juvenile justice (here), she gave us a sneak peak at some of the articles forthcoming in the Chicago-Kent Law Review’s Symposium on Women’s Legal History (to be published later in the Spring) (here and here), and alerted us to rich… [read post]
11 Jun 2010, 10:33 pm by Dan Ernst
Felice Batlan, Chicago-Kent College of Law, has posted Law and the Fabric of the Everyday: The Settlement Houses, Sociological Jurisprudence, and the Gendering of Urban Legal Culture, which originally appeared in the Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal 15 (2006): 235-284. [read post]
1 Apr 2016, 6:30 am by Karen Tani
H-Law has published a review of Women and Justice for the Poor: A History of Legal Aid, 1863-1945 (Cambridge University Press), by former guest blogger Felice Batlan (IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law). [read post]
10 Dec 2010, 7:40 am by Mary L. Dudziak
Florence Kelley and the Battle Against Laissez-Faire Constitutionalism has just been posted by Felice Batlan, Illinois Institute of Technology - Chicago-Kent College of Law. [read post]
9 Dec 2010, 8:35 pm by Lawrence Solum
Felice Batlan (Illinois Institute of Technology - Chicago-Kent College of Law) has posted Florence Kelley and the Battle Against Laissez-Faire Constitutionalism on SSRN. [read post]
11 May 2015, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
Felice Batlan illustrates that by the early twentieth century, male lawyers founded their own legal aid societies. [read post]
2 Mar 2011, 4:49 pm by Mary L. Dudziak
The Gendered Lives of Legal Aid: Lay Lawyers, Social Workers, and the Bar, 1863-1960 has just been posted by Felice Batlan, Chicago-Kent College of Law. [read post]
8 Apr 2016, 4:20 am by Tracy Thomas
Sara Mayeux (University of Pennsylvania), H-Net Book Review "Women and Justice for the Poor" In this bold work of both legal history and professional critique, Felice Batlan sets out to recover “the ‘real’ history of legal aid, a story that... [read post]
14 Apr 2016, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
Here's the citation:In Women and Justice for the Poor, Felice Batlan reconstructs a lost history of legal aid in the United States. [read post]
27 Aug 2018, 8:29 am by Tracy Thomas
Felice Batlan, Deja Vu and the Gendered Origins of the Practice of Immigration Law: The Immigrants’ Protective League, 1907-1940, Law & History Rev. (2018) This essay from Felice Batlan was written after she spent days protesting at Chicago's O'Hare airport... [read post]
1 Feb 2016, 3:35 am by Dan Filler
And they are:  José Gabilondo (FIU), Felice Batlan (IIT - Chicago Kent), Makau Mutua (Buffalo) and Lawrence Ponoroff (Arizona). [read post]
4 Jan 2017, 8:03 am by Deborah Dinner
Felice Batlan, Women and Justice for the Poor: A History of Legal Aid, 1863-1945 (2015). [read post]
20 Jan 2016, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
Felice Batlan, Illinois Institute of Technology-Chicago-Kent College of Law, has posted Forging Identities: Jewish Women, Legal Aid, and the Secular Liberal State, 1890-1930, which is forthcoming in the Indiana Journal of Law and Social Equality:This article discusses an unexamined area of the history of the legal profession — the role that late nineteenth and early twentieth century Jewish women legal practitioners played in the delivery of free legal aid to the poor as… [read post]
29 Aug 2018, 6:30 am by ernst
We believe we mentioned that Felice Batlan, Chicago-Kent Law, posted on The Docket an article, with links to primary and secondary sources, she wrote after spending day’s protesting the President’s “Muslim ban” at O’Hare Airport, but we now have an abstract for it. [read post]