I agree with Ann on this as well. I see it as artist and very beautiful. I'm believe we should be ...more
posted Friday, August 27, 2010 at 10:53pm PDT on The New York Times does soft core pornography feature of female professional tennis players
|
posted by Title IX Blog An interdisciplinary resource for news, legal developments, commentary, and scholarship about Title IX, the federal statute prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sex in federally funded schools. |
|
|
|
|
Hot off the press! Getting In the Game is a new book by Title IX expert Professor Debbie Brake from the University of Pittsburgh School of Law. In the book, Brake examines how Title IX has affected and continues to affect many facets of college and scholastic athletics for men and women. Chapter by chapter, Brake identifies and analyzes the hard and interesting questions that Title IX raises, including the appropriateness of separate teams in the first place, whether and when girls should be able to try out for boys' teams, how to measure equal opportunities (the three-part test), what counts as athletic opportunities (including the cheerleading issue), the effect of Title IX on men's sports, the effect of Title IX on women of color (for more, see here), what constitutes equal treatment, the tension between equal treatment and acknowledging sex-differences (the pregnancy issue), and general aspects of the law, such as protection against sexual harassment and employment discrimination, that apply to athletics as well.
Brake is not shy about her own opinions about where the law gets it right and in what ways it can improve. For example, Brake acknowledges the critique of Title IX that by allowing separate teams for men and women, the law has harmed women's sports by segregated women into sports that receive the least support, least prestige, and reinforce stereotypes about women's athletic inferiority. But, she argues persuasively that separate teams are needed to preserve opportunities for women -- to give them the chance to, essentially, get in the game. Relatedly, however, she critiques some of the limitations on co-ed participation, including the existing regulation that lets schools prevent girls from trying out for boys' teams in contact sports, as well as the limitation on co-ed participation in sports where both a girls team and a boys team is offered. Brake proposes that girls should be allowed to try out for boys teams in both contact and non-contact sports, and even if there is a girls team that exists in that sport, but where that team is not truly equal, due to different levels of support for teams, level of play, or status. This proposal addresses some of the anti-separatist concerns without abruptly curtailing the protection of women's opportunities that results from having a default of separate teams.
Throughout the book, Brake balances detail and context on the one hand with readability on the other. The result is a book that should appeal to a broad audience including legal experts, athletic administrators, student-athletics, parents, and fans.
For other endorsements, see here.
View Original Post at title-ix.blogspot.com
|
|
|
|
MOST POPULAR POSTS
posted by Women Undefined 07/31/10 at 7:26pm
posted by MarQFPR 08/22/10 at 8:32pm
posted by One Sport Voice 08/27/10 at 4:22pm
posted by anyatukhus 12/13/09 at 3:24pm
posted by WTA Women's Tennis 10/07/09 at 12:14pm
posted by Athletic Women Blog 11/17/09 at 1:07pm
posted by WTA Women's Tennis 10/29/09 at 7:27pm
posted by All White Kit 08/19/10 at 11:21am
posted by Athletic Women Blog 04/19/10 at 6:03pm
posted by WTA Women's Tennis 11/05/09 at 6:12pm
LATEST WTS POSTS
posted by Dyla Magazine - Women's Action Sports Coalition
Sat at 10:25pm
posted by HoopFeed.com
Sat at 10:23pm
posted by Women Undefined
Sat at 10:06pm
posted by All White Kit
Sat at 8:24pm
posted by Pretty Tough
Sat at 4:33pm
posted by Byline to Finish Line
Sat at 2:44pm
posted by THE Phaidra Knight
Sat at 12:53pm
posted by Christine
Sat at 12:48pm
posted by All White Kit
Sat at 12:42pm
posted by Dyla Magazine - Women's Action Sports Coalition
Sat at 9:33am
No one has commented on this yet. Be the first!