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Crystal Eastman: A pioneer in women s rights and workers safety

View Comments On March 24, 1911, the day before the Triangle Shirtwaist Company fire in New York City  which left 147 dead   the New York Court of Appeals had declared the state’s compulsory worker’s compensation law unconstitutional. Largely because of the fire, that law was back in force in 1913.  Elmira’s own Crystal Eastman had drafted that worker’s compensation law.  According to the National Women’s Hall of Fame, Eastman was one of only a few hundred women lawyers in the early twentieth century.  . Her pioneering report, Work Accidents and the Law  (published in book form in 1910), led New York Gov. Charles Evans Hughes to appoint her the first woman on New State’s Commission on Employer’s liability and Causes of Industrial Accidents, Unemployment and Lack of Farm Labor in 1909. As a member of that commission, Eastman drafted the country’s first workers’ compensation law. That legislation became the model for workers’ compensation throughout

Weather in northwest Orange County for Friday, June 25, 2021

Weather in northwest Orange County for Friday, June 25, 2021
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The Danger of Shortchanging Parents

The Danger of Shortchanging Parents Stephanie H. Murray © Getty / The Atlantic In 1920, following the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment, which granted women the right to vote, the lawyer and feminist Crystal Eastman turned her attention to the future. The new goal of the feminist movement, she argued, should be to ensure that women are free to pursue careers outside of child-rearing but also to guarantee that if women chose to focus on parenting, their labors would be “recognized by the world as work, requiring a definite economic reward.” A century later, American women have made considerable progress toward being able to pursue the careers they want. But parents still aren’t compensated for their work far from it.

The Stakes of the Fight to Help Parents Couldn t Be Higher

The Stakes of the Fight to Help Parents Couldn’t Be Higher Stephanie H. Murray © Getty / The Atlantic In 1920, following the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment, which granted women the right to vote, the lawyer and feminist Crystal Eastman turned her attention to the future. The new goal of the feminist movement, she argued, should be to ensure that women are free to pursue careers outside of child-rearing but also to guarantee that if women chose to focus on parenting, their labors would be “recognized by the world as work, requiring a definite economic reward.” A century later, American women have made considerable progress toward being able to pursue the careers they want. But parents still aren’t compensated for their work far from it.

Wisconsin Lawyer: The ERA: Where Are We Now?:

Wisconsin Lawyer: The ERA: Where Are We Now?:
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