John's Recount

Thoughts, Questions, and Challenges

Posts tagged RWU

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Blogging for RWU Law

Update

I’m gunna be blogging for my law school. The blog will be targeted at prospective students, so it might be interesting to some of you out there in blogger land.

I’ll put up a link to the blog once I know the URL. Here’s what should be the starting-content on the new blog.

Bio

I’m not an honour student. I’m not on Law Review. I’m a regular joe schmoe. Well, I’m a regular law student, at least. I didn’t graduate from high school. I spent five years at a community college. When I transferred to the University of California for undergrad, I majored in Philosophy, with a co-major in Law and Society. Now, I’m a 2L.

Three Weeks In

I’m sitting here contemplating my position on the first day of the fourth week of my 2nd year; the day after labour day.

Although one semester seems like a long time, and two is twice as long, law school goes by fast. I already need to be planning for summer internships and it’s barely even September! I didn’t internet last summer since I went on the London Study Abroad trip and needed at least some time for my wife (i.e., to travel to visit the in-laws). So, I’m feeling a bit pressured as to what to do with my 2nd (and last) summer of law school.

The coursework itself, however, is much more manageable this time around. Only one of my professors seems to want to “make sure” that a student never comes unprepared twice. (First year, all my professors seemed to go out of their way to impress upon us the importance of being prepared.) Combined with the fact that we’re mostly all still smarting from last year’s emphasis on preparedness and it means for a more fluid lecture. The professors seem to sense this, and so when a student isn’t prepared, they’re much more willing to give him/her the benefit of the doubt and move on to another victimstudent.

Don’t be confused, though: I have hundreds of pages to read every single day. That’s not really as scary as it sounds, but it’s nothing to sneeze at. Speaking of reading, I’ve got some to go do.

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Back from London, Back to School

This summer I spent five weeks in London with RWU Law’s very own Professor Robert Webster. Around thirty other students and I explored the history of the common law, and where it has led to, right where it began. That, and we explored London and the surrounding area… and Dublin.

The focus of the program was Comparative Trial Advocacy. Now, I have never intended to be a litigator, but not only did I enjoy the adventure and learn a great deal about what it takes to tango in the High Court, but I also learned that litigation isn’t exactly what I had thought. I can see myself as a litigator (although it’s still not on the top of my list).

The last two weeks, an optional extension for an additional 3 units, really tickled my fancy. This second part was entitled Comparative Constitutional Perspectives. The focus was privacy. I’ve come away with a whole new appreciation for both perspectives on privacy, new vocabulary for describing those perspectives, and a whole new theory all my own. (You’ll have to wait for me to publish that one later.)

Finally, two weeks to relax with my wife and now school is back on. My favourite class this semester? You guessed it: constitutional law. Well, that or Professor Santoro’s Business Organisations.

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Prostitution, Politics, and Human Trafficking

There’s a young woman in my class who is both smart and highly motivated. (Actually, there are several people like that.) This last year she led a campaign to make prostitution illegal in Rhode Island, and succeeded. I was always curious about why she was so passionate about it, though. Whenever she talked about it, she rarely spoke about the business/institution/practice of prostitution. Instead, she spoke about Human Trafficking a.k.a. slavery.

While both topics have a connotation of less-than-moral, they’re still quite distinct and I wasn’t quite sure how they overlapped. Certainly, slavery can be used to “employ”** prostitutes, but slavery can also be used to “employ” farm workers. Arguably, the conditions surrounding undocumented immigrant farm workers are just as bad if not worse than those surrounding legal prostitution in Rhode Island. Why campaign just against prostitution? Why not campaign against undocumented/coerced farm workers too?

(Just to be clear, since I do expect to be misunderstood here, I am morally and politically opposed to slavery in all its forms. I believe it to be wrong, I think its already illegal, and I believe that it should be illegal.)

(I’d like to point out that I’ve never interacted personally with the person who prompted this blog entry. I know nothing about her except what I’ve heard from her during lecture discussions or observed visually.)

I think I’ve figured out why. She, like I, is opposed to human trafficking. She is also, separately, opposed to men having sex with women. That sounds absurd, but please read just a few more sentences before you think I’m making an ad hominem attack.

I took a course on feminism during my last semester in undergrad. The professor for that course, who was a fantastic professor, was married and had one child. Her husband and her split the child care responsibilities. She worked Monday, Wednesday, and Friday and he worked Tuesday, Thursday, and either Saturday or Sunday. Or something like that. On days when she was at home with their child, she would make dinner for her and her child. She deliberately would never make enough for her husband to eat when he got home later in the evening. She was already making dinner, and already cooked for two. However, she deliberately never cooked for three. On purpose.

Her husband would come sit with them at the dinner table with a bowl of cereal.

Since she teaches a feminism course, you can probably guess that she is a feminist. Her blind opposition to traditional roles was so strong that she not only avoided the role but avoided the appearance of the role. Since women have traditionally made dinner for their husbands, she now refuses to make dinner for her husband even though she is already in the kitchen making dinner. There’s something not quite right about that. (Her husband does cook for her.)

I think that my classmate’s opposition to prostitution is feminist in nature, and not merely a moral objection to slavery.

Why does the nature of her opposition matter? It matters because of her choice of what to campaign against. She campaigned against one thing, while using rhetoric directed against another thing. The arguments in favour of subjugating men as “pay back” for their historical subjugation of women are completely different from the arguments in favour of stronger slavery legislation. That, in turn, is significant because there isn’t as much support for the subjugation of men as there is for anti-slavery legislation. Not only would virtually all (but not absolutely all) men be opposed to male-subjugation, but the vast majority of women would be similarly opposed.