![]() ![]() I am incredibly grateful to have worked with such wonderful team members and talented authors. ![]() I also greatly appreciate the journal’s commitment to publishing student voices and more unconventional points of view. The Journal has provided a community of like-minded individuals that share the same passions for furthering gender equality in the law. Q: Why did you join this organization? What do you like about it?Ī: I joined the JGJ because I deeply resonated with the journal’s mission to further discussions on gender in the law. These efforts have led the journal to be ranked 9th in the country among gender, women, and sexuality law journals. The Journal offers an inclusive space for feminism, race theory, queer theory, multiculturalism, animal rights, disability rights, language rights, international human rights, criminal defendants’ rights, and human rights of people in prison, among others. We are a progressive, diverse, open, and forward-looking collective of individuals working together to widen the scope of legal scholarship. Staffed entirely by students and volunteers, the journal publishes twice a year - giving its subscribers access to discussions on cutting-edge issues which many law journals either avoid or ignore. Q: What is the UC Law SF Journal on Gender and Justice?Ī: The Journal on Gender and Justice (JGJ) provides a forum for voices outside of the traditional scope of legal academic scholarship. ![]() Inspired by its non-traditional approach to legal scholarship, Alysyn Martinez ’23, co-editor-in-chief of the UC Law San Francisco Journal on Gender and Justice, talks about her organization and why she joined it. Alysyn Martinez ’23 is co-editor-in-chief of the UC Law San Francisco Journal on Gender & Justice. ![]()
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