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The Federal Constitutional Court: Fifty Years of the Struggle for Gender Equality

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

Extract

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It has been a long journey from the noble declaration in the Federal Republic's new constitution (Grundgesetz [Basic Law]) that women and men have equal rights, to the establishment of concrete laws and jurisprudence that now assure that women and men actually receive equal treatment and that women are no longer disadvantaged in society (and even more, laws and jurisprudence that assure that women receive support if they encounter structural disadvantages). This article, in looking back on its first fifty years of service, surveys the decisive role that the Bundesverfassungsgericht (Federal Constitutional Court) played in that journey.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2001 by German Law Journal GbR 

References

This article was originally published, in German, in the German magazine Emma: Renate Jeager, “Wie das Grundgesetz in unsere Gesetze kam,” EMMA, July/August 1999, at 82. Subtle differences between the article as it appears here and the original are a result of the translation into the English language and the editors' efforts to harmonize the article with the theme of this special issue of the German Law Journal.Google Scholar
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