Recommended: Education racial policies during the Civil War
Sonia Sotomayor was the first Latina Supreme Court Justice in U.S. history. She was nominated by president Barack Obama on May 26, 2009. Sotomayor is a women who got nominated by Barack Obama. She graduated from Yale Law School and passed the bar in 1980. She became a U.S. District Court Judge in 1992 and was elevated to the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals in 1998.
Sonia Sotomayor Sonia Sotomayor was the first Hispanic nominee for the Justice Court. I think she is a great person and I’d like to be like her one day. Sonia Sotomayor was born on June 25th, 1954 in The Bronx, New York. Her father died when she was 9, he was also an alcoholic.
A young girl went with her father to visit a neighbor family. When they arrived, the girl saw that her neighbor had been beating his wife and child. There was nothing the girl could do for her neighbors, but she was filled with a strong desire for justice. This desire would lead the young girl to become one of the most prominent figures on the United States Supreme Court. Sandra Day O’Connor impacted society by occupying a position as the first woman on Supreme Court, voting against discrimination of gender or race, and abiding by the Constitution in every issue.
Eventually, after going all the way to the supreme court twice, she was accepted into OU’s law school. Although she was allowed to attend white classes, she was required to sit in a special part of the class designated “Colored”. Ada’s first lawsuit created a law school in Oklahoma specifically for black students. This was neither acceptable to Ada nor was it acceptable to her council. Ada’s lawyer, Thurgood Marshall, brought the case to the supreme court contending that the very nature of law school and of most graduate school fields require fellow piers to discuss and debate with.
In her speech, “For the Equal Rights Amendment” Shirley Chisholm addresses her views on securing women’s equality to ensure women have better opportunities. She is an American politician, educator and author that became the first black woman elected to the United States Congress. Chisholm supports her claims about equal rights for women by using examples of statistics to prove a point. Her purpose is to persuade her audience that women in America are neglected by equal rights and excluded from things that men are not. Throughout her deliverance she expressed an inspiring and informative tone to uplift her audience so that Congress can make a change for women.
Justice Sonia Sotomayor was born on June 25th 1954 in the South Bronx area of New York to parents Juan and Celina Baez Sotomayor. Her parents who were of Puerto Rican descent moved their family to New York for a better opportunity for their children. Her parents worked hard to make a living her mother was a nurse a methadone clinic and her father worked with his hands and the family lived modestly within their means. Justice Sotomayor was diagnosed with type one diabetes at the age of seven and began taking insulin shot’s, shortly after her father died in 1963 when she was nine, leaving her mother as a single parent, during her upbringing her mother Celina placed a huge emphasis on the importance of education, pushing her children to become
Every day that people spend on the Earth, there are obstacles that they have to overcome. Women have had to overcome many obstacles to be treated with respect. In "Source 1: Ruth Bader Ginsburg," and "Source 2: Sonia Sotomayor," both women have had to overcome challenges to work where they wanted. Ruth Ginsburg and Sonia Sotomayor are women who have to work hard and overcome challenges to fight discrimination. Ruth Ginsburg had to fight against discrimination so she could become a judge and a lawyer.
“Female Issues” From doing something as simple as completing law school, to becoming a world renowned judge Leslie Crocker Snyder did it all. In her Autobiography 25 TO LIFE THE TRUTH, THE WHOLE TRUTH, AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH she shows how she got to becoming a supreme court judge, explaining what she went through in cases, home life, and prejudice towards women. She said at the beginning of the book during her first years as a prosecutor “I thought I was doing my job properly and was fitting into the office well... I had thought there were no “female issues” with me.”(Synder25) As it turned out the office was against her for being a female because of an old female worker who couldn’t handle the stress and got demoted to the indictment
The women from the House of Representatives who tried to address the situation and advocate for Anita Hill had several identities that allowed them to present her case in a public light. The first identity being that they were considered people of power that represented their citizens. The second identity being that they were women, that many people questioned if women could be in a position of power. The third identity being that the women were indeed the minority, that not many women were in politics, which appeared to be a disadvantage to them.
As noted in Ruth Bader Ginsburg's entry in the Encyclopedia of World Biography, Marshall's work helped create a legacy of outspokenness that has continued to this day. The legacy of Marshall's work is still being felt today in the efforts of aspiring judges and attorneys who continue to fight for justice in the courts. Former Supreme Court Judge and feminist icon Ginsburg frequently cited Marshall as having a significant effect on her writing. Like Marshall, Ginsburg understood that legal victories were essential for promoting social change. She recognized that the struggle for women's rights and civil rights correlate and fought to ensure that women received equal protection under the law.
Throughout the 1800s, women fighting for their rights was an essential part of history. It made men realize that all women and people of color were equal. It only took two incredible women to change men's perspectives. Sojourner Truth and Susan B. Anthony made incredible speeches, “Ain’t I a Woman” and “Women's Right to Vote.” These women used word choice to convey the central ideas of their speech, and raise the impact.
Justice Thurgood Marshall Response Justice Thurgood Marshall said in his “Reflections on the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution”, “I do not believe the meaning of the Constitution was forever ‘fixed’ at the Philadelphia Convention. Nor do I find the wisdom, foresight, and sense of justice exhibited by the framers particularly profound. To the contrary, the government they devised was defective from the start, requiring several amendments, a civil war, and momentous social transformation to attain the system of constitutional government and its respect for the individual freedoms and human rights, that we hold as fundamental as today” (Marshall). In this passage of his essay, Judge Marshall is critical of the government that is
Both of these examples show how prejudice and stereotypes can affect a court
Imagine one day you wake up and many of your constitutional rights, such as the right to vote, are gone. In Harper Lee’s novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, Sexism plays a huge role in many scenarios throughout the story. For example, a quote in the novel states, “ ‘Scout, i’m tellin’ you for the last time to shut your trap or go home- I declare to the lord you’re gettin more like a girl every day.’ With that, I had no option but to join them.”(Lee
There are many indicators of the huge impact in disparities in sentencing women as compared to men and more so when it revolves around minorities ( race and class). Though there are lower crime rates among women as compared to men, there are significant disparities which tend to show favouritism to women. Research has shown that men get 63 per cent longer custodial sentences than women. In addition, it is twice more likely to have women get non custodial sentences even after conviction. However, as mentioned the disparities are more profound when issues of race and class are intertwined in the sentencing.