Ruth Bader Ginsburg: A Life Audiobook (Free) | AudioBooksLoft

Ruth Bader Ginsburg: A Life Audiobook (Free)

Summary:

The first full life-private, public, legal, philosophical-of the 107th Supreme Court Justice, probably one of the most profound and profoundly transformative legal minds of our time; a reserve fifteen years in work, written using the co-operation of Ruth Bader Ginsburg herself and based on many interviews with the justice, her hubby, her kids, her close friends, and her associates.

With this large, comprehensive, revelatory biography, Jane De Hart explores the central experiences that crucially shaped about Ruth Bader Ginsburg: A Life Ginsburg’s passion for justice, her advocacy for gender equality, her meticulous jurisprudence: her desire to make We individuals even more united and our union even more perfect. At the heart of her story and abiding beliefs-her Jewish history. Tikkun olam, the Hebrew injunction to “restoration the globe,” with its profound meaning for a young girl who grew up during the Holocaust and World Battle II. We see the impact of her mother, Celia Amster Bader, whose intellect inspired her daughter’s feminism, insisting that Ruth become unbiased, as she observed her mother dealing with terminal cervical cancer (Celia died the day before Ruth, at seventeen, graduated from high school).

From Ruth’s times as a baton twirler at Brooklyn’s Adam Madison High School, to Cornell University, Harvard and Columbia Regulation Schools (first in her class), to being a law professor at Rutgers College or university (mostly of the women in the field and fighting pay discrimination), concealing her second pregnancy so as never to risk dropping her work; founding the Women’s Privileges Law Reporter, composing the brief for the first case that persuaded the Supreme Courtroom to strike down a sex-discriminatory condition rules, after that at Columbia (regulations school’s first tenured female professor); getting the director from the women’s privileges project of the ACLU, persuading the Supreme Court in some decisions to ban laws and regulations that denied females full citizenship status with men.

Her years over the U.S. Courtroom of Appeals for the Area of Columbia Circuit, choosing cases the way she played golfing, as she, left-handed, used right-handed clubs-aiming remaining, swinging right, striking down the middle. Her years on the Supreme Court .

A pioneering existence and legal profession whose profound mark on American jurisprudence, on American society, on our American character and heart, will reverberate deep into the twenty-first century and beyond.