A supreme choice
A Virtual Townhall with
Katherine Franke
James L. Dohr Professor of Law, Columbia Law School
A near 50-year precedence of a US law protecting women's fundamental right to choice is seemingly about to expire, thanks to the designed conservative transformation of the Supreme Court.
Please join us as Professor Franke, James L. Dohr Professor of Law at Columbia Law School reviews the history of Roe v. Wade and discusses how it has affected American welfare throughout the decades, how do the leaked arguments posed by the SCOTUS majority stand to legal scrutiny and Constitution, and finally what ramification should be expected on its possible repeal.
Franke's remarks will be followed by Q&A.
Cosponsored by:
- Yale Club of Washington DC
- MIT Club of Washington DC
Katherine Franke is the James L. Dohr Professor of Law at Columbia University, and Director of the Center for Gender & Sexuality Law. She is also on the Executive Committees of Columbia’s Institute for Research on Women, Gender and Sexuality, and the Center for Palestine Studies. She is among the nation's leading scholars writing on law, sexuality race, and religion drawing from feminist, queer, and critical race theory.
Professor Franke is the founder and faculty director of the Law, Rights, and Religion Project, a think tank based at Columbia Law School that develops policy and thought leadership on the complex ways in which religious liberty rights interact with other fundamental rights. In 2021, Professor Franke launched the ERA Project, a law and policy think tank to develop academically rigorous research, policy papers, expert guidance, and strategic leadership on the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to the U.S. Constitution, and on the role of the ERA in advancing the larger cause of gender-based justice.
Professor Franke is currently leading a team that is researching Columbia Law School’s relationship to slavery and its legacies.
Her first book, Wedlocked: The Perils of Marriage Equality (NYU Press 2015), considers the costs of winning marriage rights for same-sex couples today and for African Americans at the end of the Civil War. She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2011 to undertake research for Wedlocked. Her second book, Repair: Redeeming the Promise of Slavery’s Abolition (Haymarket Press 2019), makes the case for racial reparations in the United States by returning to a time at the end of slavery when many formerly enslaved people were provided land explicitly as a form of reparation, yet after President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated the land was stolen back from freed people and given to former slave owners.