About the National Women's Law Center
Since 1972, the Center has expanded the possibilities for women and girls in this country. The Center uses the law in all its forms: getting new laws on the books and enforced; litigating ground-breaking cases in state and federal courts all the way to the Supreme Court; and educating the public about ways to make the law and public policies work for women and their families. An experienced staff of more than 50 takes on the issues that cut to the core of women's and girls' lives in health, education, employment, and family economic security - with special attention given to the needs of low-income women and their families.
Program Areas
Women's health is jeopardized by limited access to health care; reproductive rights are under concerted attack; and women's health needs are often overlooked. The Center's Health and Reproductive Rights program is fighting to ensure women's access to comprehensive, affordable, and high-quality health care and coverage; protect reproductive rights; and promote policies that advance women's health on the state and federal levels. Current priorities include ensuring that health reform proposals at the state and federal levels address the different challenges all women face in accessing health care; educating policy makers and the public about the need to protect and promote women's fundamental reproductive rights and incorporate comprehensive reproductive health services in health care reform proposals; advocating for policies that promote women's wellness, such as insurance laws that mandate important preventive health benefits and increased funding for family planning services; and fighting to protect Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP).
Gender gaps persist in education, particularly when it comes to training women and girls for today's technology-oriented workplace, leveling the playing field in athletics, and other areas essential to the full development of their potential. The Center's Education program addresses these gaps by fighting for strong enforcement of Title IX and promoting programs that remove barriers to girls' educational opportunities. Current priorities include opening doors to vocational and career education programs that train young women to enter and succeed in non-traditional fields with the promise of greater pay and job opportunities; bringing groundbreaking lawsuits and undertaking other advocacy efforts to enforce Title IX's promise of equal treatment in education, including in athletics; and fighting for strong affirmative action policies that take race and gender into account to remedy discrimination and promote diversity in education.
Women still face discrimination in pay and promotions and a lack of critical supports that help them succeed in the workplace. The Center's Employment program addresses these barriers by fighting for equal treatment of women in all aspects of their employment. Current priorities include fighting for equal pay and benefits for women, including expanded family and medical leave opportunities; gaining strong enforcement of laws prohibiting sexual harassment and other job discrimination; and promoting the creation and preservation of valuable affirmative action programs in the workplace.
More women than men are poor in this country and their poverty is far more persistent. The Center's Family Economic Security program advances laws and public policies to help economically vulnerable women — including single mothers, women of color and older women — by promoting high-quality, affordable child and dependent care, meaningful income support programs, strong Social Security and other retirement systems, and fair and fiscally responsible tax and budget policies. Current priorities include expanding federal and state resources for child care and early education; protecting and improving Social Security, especially against the threat of privatization; and leading a massive coalition and long-term public education effort to achieve a federal tax system that raises sufficient revenues to meet national priorities and assures that individuals and corporations pay their fair share.
In addition, the Center moves quickly to address issues that transcend these program areas. For example, the core legal rights that women have won over the last 30 years — the right to choose, the right to equal opportunities in the workplace and schools, and a broad range of other legal protections that promote women's well-being and safety — are currently jeopardized by the appointment of federal judges with an extreme legal philosophy. The Center is leading the way in the debates over the Senate's role in evaluating and confirming judicial nominations and highlighting what is at stake for women and the public at large with respect to lifetime appointments to the federal courts.
Accomplishments
The Center has been at the forefront of landmark legal and public policy initiatives to improve the lives of women, girls and families since 1972. For example, the Center was instrumental in spurring policy makers to strengthen women's health care policies with a first-of-its-kind, comprehensive research and advocacy tool, Making the Grade on Women's Health: A National and State-by-State Report Card series. The Center has improved and protected women's access to health care by working to prevent the implementation of proposals that would eliminate important consumer health protections and to promote proposals that expand comprehensive health coverage, especially for low-income women. The Center has also exposed, prevented, and redressed refusals by pharmacists to dispense lawfully prescribed contraception by representing individuals who faced refusals, changing corporate pharmacy policies and practices, securing state policies limiting or prohibiting refusals, and achieving the introduction of federal legislation outlawing such refusals. For more information on the Center's history of accomplishments, please view "Expanding the Possibilities for Thirty-Five Years" and the biographies of Center Co-Presidents Marcia D. Greenberger and Nancy Duff Campbell.
Supporters
The Center's work would not be possible without the support of thousands of individual supporters and institutions, including: American Federation of State, County, & Municipal Employees; American Legacy Foundation; AOL Time Warner; American Express; Arnold & Porter; AT&T Foundation; Beech Street Foundation; BET Holdings; the Annie E. Casey Foundation; Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation; Cigna Foundation; Citigroup; Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, Inc.; The Beatrice R. & Joseph A. Coleman Foundation; Marjorie Cook Foundation; The Coca Cola Company; Credit Suisse First Boston; Nathan Cummings Foundation; Deer Creek Foundation; The Dyson Foundation; Equal Justice Works; Fannie Mae Foundation; Ford Foundation; Wallace Alexander Gerbode Foundation; The George Gund Foundation; Harley-Davidson Motor Company; William and Flora Hewlett Foundation; IBM Corporation; Kaiser Family Foundation; W.K. Kellogg Foundation; The MARGARET Fund; The John Merck Fund; Moriah Fund; The Ms. Foundation for Women; National Education Association; New York Stock Exchange; Open Society Institute; Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide; The Ottinger Foundation; The Overbrook Foundation; The David and Lucile Packard Foundation; PepsiCo Foundation; The William Penn Foundation; The Public Welfare Foundation; The Rockefeller Foundation; Rockefeller Family Foundation; The Sandler Family Supporting Foundation; the Caroline and Sigmund Schott Foundation; Scherman Foundation; Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom; Simpson Thacher & Bartlett; Three Guineas Fund; Turner Foundation; Wilmer, Cutler, Pickering; Wyeth ... and many other generous foundations, law firms, corporations, unions and individuals.
For information about making a contribution to the Center, please call (202) 588-5180 or make a secure donation by credit card or by downloading a contribution form and mailing it with a check to National Women's Law Center, 11 Dupont Circle, NW, #800 Washington, D.C. 20036
The National Women's Law Center is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization. Contributions to the Center are tax-deductible under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Service Code as allowed by law.