Elizabeth M. Schneider
Elizabeth M. Schneider is a professor at the Brooklyn Law School, and a leading feminist scholar in the fields of gender law, domestic violence, and federal civil litigation. She was co-counsel (with and Nancy Stearns) in the successful appeal of State of Washington v. Wanrow, one of the first women's self-defense cases; the analysis and strategies emerging from the case became the underpinning of many future battered women's self-defense defenses.[1][2]
Education
Schneider graduated from Bryn Mawr College cum laude with Honors in Political Science (1968), was a Leverhulme Fellow at the London School of Economics where she received an M.Sc. in Political Sociology (1969), and has a Juris Doctor from New York University School of Law, where she was an Arthur Garfield Hays Civil Liberties Fellow (1973), She clerked for the late United States District Judge Constance Baker Motley of the Southern District of New York.[1]
Career
Schneider is the Rose L. Hoffer Professor of Law at Brooklyn Law School. She has been a visiting professor of law at Harvard Law School and Columbia Law School.[1]
Schneider is the author of Battered Women and Feminist Lawmaking (Yale University Press, 2000), which won the 2000 Association of American Publishers Professional-Scholarly Publishing Award in Law.[1] A Columbia Journal of Gender & Law review described it as an "outstanding critical overview of the history of the battered women’s movement and the complex legal and social issues facing battered women... Schneider adopts a feminist theoretical approach, which links theory with practice, to analyze the legal and social responses to domestic violence over the last two decades. At the core of this book is the call to recognize that domestic violence is not an isolated problem, but, rather, is embedded in gender inequality that permeates our society."[3] She is co-editor of Women and the Law Stories (Foundation Press, 2011; with Stephanie M. Wildman), and co-author of the casebook Domestic Violence and the Law: Theory and Practice (Foundation Press, 2013) (with Cheryl Hanna, Emily J. Sack and Judith G. Greenberg). She lectures internationally on gender and law and domestic violence. She was a consultant for the UN Secretary-General’s In-Depth Study of All Forms of Violence Against Women, presented to the United Nations General Assembly in 2006.[1]
Personal life
Schneider has two children. She was divorced in 1986. In 2017, she placed a personal ad in the Yale Alumni Magazine. Benjamin Liptzin, a retired retired geriatric psychiatrist and professor emeritus of psychiatry at Tufts University School of Medicine, replied. The couple were married in 2020, via Zoom.[4]
References
- ^ a b c d e "Elizabeth M. Schneider". New York University School of Law. 2022. Retrieved Sep 11, 2023.
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Coker, Donna K. (April 3, 2013). "The Story of Wanrow: The Reasonable Woman and the Law of Self-Defense". SSRN. Retrieved Sep 11, 2023.
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Groisser, Suzanne J. (Jan 1, 2001). "BOOK REVIEW: Elizabeth M. Schneider, Battered Women and Feminist Lawmaking". Columbia Journal of Gender and Law. 10 (2).
- ^ Radomsky, Rosalie R. (Jan. 1, 2021). "A Soft Spot for Yalies". New York Times. Retrieved Sep 11, 2023.
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