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  1. Susan Estrich (born December 16, 1952) is an American lawyer, professor, author, political operative, and political commentator.

  2. Sep 11, 2016 · Susan Estrich is known for being first. A celebrated feminist legal scholar, Ms. Estrich was the first female president of The Harvard Law Review. Working for Michael S. Dukakis in 1988, she...

  3. No one will ever again be able to address the legal problems of rape without taking Susan Estrichs landmark work into account. It is a model of how to think about a perplexing legal issue without losing track either of logic or of human experience.

  4. In this chapter I offer an account of Susan Estrichs groundbreaking and influential book Real Rape (1987). I will explore what led Estrich to write the book, as well as its contribution and its significance, considering the temporal and cultural context in which Estrich was writing.

  5. The first woman president of the Harvard Law Review, the first woman to run a presidential campaign, Susan Estrich is the Robert Kingsley Professor of Law and Political Science at the University of Southern California, a nationally syndicated columnist, a contributor to USA Today and the Los Angeles Times, a legal and political analyst who ...

  6. In this chapter I offer an account of Susan Estrichs groundbreaking and influential book Real Rape (1987). I will explore what led Estrich to write the book, as well as its contribution and its significance, considering the temporal and cultural context in which Estrich was writing.

  7. Jun 20, 2024 · From the Left / Susan Estrich / Apr 20, 2024. Thirty years ago, O.J. Simpson got away with murder. Politics was to blame, in the form of racism and sexism. His lawyers put the LAPD on trial for racism, even though Simpson himself was not a victim of the police department's racism.

  8. Susan Estrich is Robert Kingsley Professor of Law and Political Science at the University of Southern California.

  9. Mar 27, 2003 · At the dawn of the twenty-first century, women in America are richer, more educated, and more powerful than they've ever been. So why is it, Susan Estrich asks, that they account for a mere three percent of the nation's top executives? Why are there only three women running Fortune 500 companies?

  10. Harvard Law School provides unparalleled opportunities to study law with extraordinary colleagues in a rigorous, vibrant, and collaborative environment.