Legal Women November 2020

Page 39

© John Mathew Smith | CC BY-SA 2.0

Obituary

Ruth Bader Ginsburg Monica Feria-Tinta pays tribute to #RBG and reflects on meeting her in 2007

Ruth Bader Ginsburg

O

n 18 September, the Supreme Court of United States lost, in its words, ‘a justice of historic stature’. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was the Court’s most prominent member, before passing away at the age of 87. She served for 27 years at the highest court of the United States, becoming one of the most influential legal figures of our times and a cultural icon. ‘A Brooklynite, born and bred’ and a first-generation American on her father’s side, she was taught to love learning and to care about people since early childhood by her parents. Neither of her parents had the means to attend college themselves. She was one of only nine women in a class of over 500 men at Harvard Law School and became top of the class, making it to the Harvard Law Review the following year. Yet, in her own words, when she graduated from law school in 1959, ‘not a law firm in the entire city of New York would employ [her].’ ‘I became a lawyer in days when women were not wanted by most members of the legal profession’ – she said. The barriers women faced in her lifetime made her realise as she put it, that ‘being a woman was an impediment.’

She started to build transformative case-law before the US Supreme Court as a litigator in Frontiero v Richardson 411 U.S. 677 (1973). From that moment on, throughout the 1970s, she continued challenging discriminatory laws taking cases that would make good law before the Supreme Court, effectively using the law as a vehicle of change: step by step, in an incremental fashion.

One of the best legal brains the US (and indeed, the world) has produced, a champion of gender equality and foremost defender of Constitutional rights for all, she will be forever an inspiration for generations to come. ■

© FiHow | CC BY-SA 3.0

Her response to the challenges of her time set her out on a journey of her own. For more than a decade, until her first judicial appointment in 1980, she led the fight in the courts for gender equality. She became a formidable advocate for equal rights of women and men and the architect of a legal landscape that fundamentally changed ‘the way the world was for American women’.

her office, at the Supreme Court in Washington D.C., it seemed perfectly normal to be discussing law with her, amongst her books, in the quietness. In retrospect, I now realised how privileged I was. In awe, I saw her in action that day in Medellín v. Texas, 552 U.S. 491, as her guest. The majority on the Bench found that an International Court of Justice judgment which had found the United States in violation of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations with a bearing on individual rights on capital cases, was not directly enforceable as domestic law in state courts in the United States. She was a dissenting voice in that case.

Monica Feria-Tinta Barrister

I had the privilege of meeting her in 2007. She chaired the ceremony in which I was awarded the Gruber Justice Prize for leading a ground-breaking case that initiated the feminization of human rights law in Latin America. Petite and fragile in appearance, Justice Ginsburg’s apparent vulnerability contrasted with the fearlessness of her views in her judgments and separate opinions and her laser-sharp precision. We discussed her work at the US Supreme Court, including those cases which raised issues of international law. Sitting down in LegalWomen | 39


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LW Social Media Content Writers

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page 42

Why Client-Centred Law Firms Succeed

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page 42

Software swap guide: four tips to protecting your data

5min
pages 40-41

Ruth Bader Ginsburg

3min
page 39

LW likes

1min
page 33

LW recommends

1min
page 33

Careers Q&A

7min
pages 31-32

Stephanie Boyce

4min
page 30

The Scottish Solution to COVID-19

1min
page 29

A Pandemic perspective

5min
page 26

Fiona Fitzgerald

4min
page 25

Winter is coming ...

7min
pages 23-24

Employers’ Initiative on Domestic Abuse (EIDA)

1min
page 22

Sara Carnegie

5min
pages 21-22

Cybercare

1min
page 20

LW blogs

1min
page 13

Mary Young

7min
pages 12-13

Carrie Morrison portrait

1min
page 10

LW Mission

2min
page 7

LW Editorial Board

2min
page 6

Sally Penni MBE, Barrister & Founder of Women in the Law UK

5min
pages 28-29

Peeling a Bitter Onion – A Project

12min
pages 34-38

Diversity and Innovation

4min
page 27

Domestic Abuse

4min
pages 19-20

Cherie Blair answers

4min
page 15

Profile: Amanda Millar

4min
page 14

CILEx

3min
page 8

Joint Q for Commissioners

11min
pages 16-18

Mentoring is a key aspect of diversity practice

3min
page 11

Gender Equality must continue

5min
pages 9-10

Welcome

2min
page 4
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