LAPA Seminar with Lynda Dodd *04 - Sisterhood of Struggle: Alice Paul, the National Woman's Party, and the Campaign for the 19th Amendment

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Date & Time Apr 22 2019 4:30 PM - 6:00 PM
Speaker(s)
Lynda Dodd *04, LAPA Fellow; City University of New York-City College, 2010-2018
Audience Open to the Public

LAPA’s seminar format encourages attendees to familiarize themselves with the paper in advance. A commentator opens the session by summarizing the main themes in the paper and presenting some topics for discussion.

Copies of the seminar paper are typically available about 10 days before the event, during regular business hours, at the LAPA Offices on the 3rd floor of Wallace Hall.

Lynda Dodd's teaching and research focuses on American political and constitutional development, constitutional law and theory, jurisprudence, and civil rights litigation. Her forthcoming book, Taming the Rights Revolution: The Supreme Court, Constitutional Torts, and the Elusive Quest for Accountability (Cambridge University Press), examines the political and legal debates regarding civil rights litigation under Section 1983, from its origins in the Civil Rights Act of 1871 to the Roberts Court era.  At LAPA, she will be completing a new book project entitled "Sisterhood of Struggle: Alice Paul, the National Woman's Party, and the Campaign for the Nineteenth Amendment."

http://lapa.princeton.edu/

More information: Contact Judi Rivkin, jrivkin@princeton.edu

Sponsored by the Program in Law and Public Affairs