Talk on the failure of the legal system to keep pace with social change in America by Nancy Reeves, attorney and writer-lecturer on the status of women. Reeves argues that mummified legal systems that preserve antiquated laws distort women's lives and that women's liberation should aim to sweep these laws away, and that the erosion of the legal fiction of "man and wife" as a single entity, population density and the pill have helped to undermine the biological determinism upon which women's legal role has been founded. This is her final lecture in the series A Woman's Place.
This recording has been digitally preserved as part of Pacifica's American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982 grant preservation project, and is available for research and reference . Please contact the archives via telephone: 818-506-1077 or email: americanwomen at pacificaradioarchives dot org for information on how to obtain a copy of this program. Thank you.
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