Help Us Fight Back Against Efforts to Roll Back Gender Justice
Extremist judges will not stop endangering the lives of pregnant people or people who may become pregnant—overturning Roe v. Wade, attacking medication abortion, threatening the future of IVF, and this week at SCOTUS, emergency abortion care.
Our lawyers are waging strategic fights that make clear what is at stake for people who can become pregnant and seek to bolster our fundamental rights to control our lives, futures, and destinies.
Make a donation to the National Women’s Law Center to power the fight for accessible health care and a better future for all. Every donation is 100% tax-deductible.
Headwraps. Coats. Tank tops. These are just a few of the items of clothing keeping girls from their education in DC. Too many students are removed from the classroom and even sent home, often illegally, for violating strict dress codes. And the rules aren’t applied equally, either. Students report that Black girls, and especially curvier students, are disproportionately targeted. Disturbingly, schools tell girls they must change in order to avoid “distracting” their male classmates — or to avoid being sexually harassed. These punishments interrupt girls’ educations while sending dangerous messages to the school community: how a girl looks is more important than what she thinks, and girls are ultimately responsible for the misbehavior of boys.
In DRESS CODED: Black Girls, Bodies, and Bias in D.C. Schools, the National Women’s Law Center and 21 Black girls who live and learn in D.C. expose common problems with D.C. dress codes, discusses their impact on students, and propose better policies.
The good news is that our co-authors have great ideas about how schools can do better. In the report, readers will find a checklist for schools and policy recommendations for school leaders, district leaders, and local government.