Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw has been an Ira Glasser Racial
Justice Fellow at the ACLU since February 2005; working primarily
at the National Office. Crenshaw is a professor of law at
Columbia and UCLA Law Schools. The groundbreaking work
for which she is best known explores the many ways in which
various forms of discriminations can intersect, creating special
vulnerabilities for some that are not readily identifiable within
traditional equality law. She coined the term "intersectionality" to highlight
the overlapping vulnerabilities that are at play in shaping the life chances
of some of society's most vulnerable populations: women who are poor, of color,
or who are undocumented. Intersectionality is particularly germane in the
areas of employment discrimination, violence against women,
and criminal justice, areas of particular interest to the
Women's Rights Project.
Recently, Crenshaw has been active in reframing contemporary
conceptions of discrimination and equal opportunity with a special
focus on affirmative action, and in building productive
exchanges between academic/research communities and
frontline advocates. The Glasser Fellowship has given her the
opportunity to pursue these interests with WRP and the ACLU
Racial Justice Program. Two of her collaborations with WRP have
been particularly productive. Crenshaw and WRP participated in
a conference organized by Manhattan Borough President C.
Virginia Fields that reviewed the consequences of New York City's
policies mandating arrest under certain circumstances where
domestic assaults have occurred. Asked to do the keynote for this
conference, Crenshaw worked with WRP staff interns to compile
existing information about the effects of these policies across various
groups of women. Applying an intersectional lens to the
question, it was apparent that such policies warranted a closer
look in light of the unintended differential consequences for
women of color and immigrant women. Some of the data
suggest that these women were themselves more likely to be
arrested under mandatory arrest laws, and that these laws did
not contribute to their increased safety. WRP staff helped frame
the dialogue around these important questions and facilitated
discussion at the conference, held at Columbia Law School. The
conference participants called for better access to information
from police departments in order to accurately assess the
impact of these laws on all populations.
A collaboration with Crenshaw and Eve Ensler resulted in an
important WRP event, "Any One of Us: Words from Prison." This
event, co-sponsored by WRP and the NYCLU, was performed at
Lincoln Center in New York City in June. Crenshaw and Ensler
had sought other collaborative opportunities since Crenshaw
wrote and performed a piece in the Harlem, New York production
of "The Vagina Monologues," which was featured in the documentary,
Until The Violence Stops. That opportunity came with
the creation of V-Day's two-week festival focusing on violence
against women. Violence is an often-underappreciated risk factor
leading to the incarceration of women; it remains one of the
reasons that women are the fastest growing segment of the
prison population. The goal of the event was to bring much-needed
attention to the connection between violence against
women and incarceration, and to highlight the need for both
those interested in working against violence and those advocating for alternatives to incarceration to focus
on these intersections
in their work. WRP's expertise in domestic violence and in
women's incarceration placed it in a unique position to provide a
series of snapshots revealing how women often become
entrapped by a variety of factors which, left unchecked, could
lead to their incarceration. In addition to revealing how ‘any one
of us' could be caught up in this net of violence, WRP offered a
range of reforms and actions that concerned individuals could
engage in to make a difference.
Crenshaw also sought opportunities for her Columbia students
to benefit from her association with the ACLU through
her course on Social Justice Litigation. WRP along with other
ACLU projects provided externship opportunities for students
in Crenshaw's seminar. The seminar was designed as a development
opportunity for students who are interested in pursuing
careers advancing civil rights and civil liberties. WRP provided
exciting opportunities for Crenshaw's students to contribute
to a range of WRP's projects while simultaneously
exploring the broader challenges and opportunities facing
social justice advocates in class.
Although Crenshaw concludes the Glasser Fellowship in
February, she looks forward to building on the opportunities
that the Fellowship has provided and to continuing her close
working relationship with the Women's Rights Project.