American Decades
Abortion: Roe v. Wade
Meet Jane Roe.
In late 1969 Norma McCorvey, twenty-one and single, found herself with an unwanted pregnancy. She worked as a waitress in a bar; previously she had worked with a traveling circus selling tickets. She already had a five-year-old daughter for whom she could not afford to care. McCorvey's mother had taken custody of her daughter. She had little money and nowhere to go. McCorvey's father was unable to provide for both Norma and her future child. She did not think she was in any condition to care for another child. She wanted an abortion. In Texas she could have one only if her life was endangered by a pregnancy, which it was not.
Coffee and Weddington.
McCorvey met Linda Coffee, a young attorney concerned about feminist issues. Coffee spoke on women's rights around Dallas, where she lived. She was active in the Women's Equity Action League, an organization that worked for equal employment opportunity for...
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1970's Law and Justice
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Abortion: Roe v. Wade
- The Attica Riot and the Rights of Prisoners
- The Changing Legal Profession
- Crime and Public Opinion
- The Death Penalty
- The Due-Process Revolution
- Employment Opportunity: Job Requirements and Discrimination
- Environmental Law
- The Equal Rights Amendment
- Equality Before the Law: Men and Women
- Legal Services
- The Other Side of Law and Order: Nixon and the Constraints of Law
- The Supreme Court and Public Policy: The Supreme Court of the 1970s
- Paddling in Schools
- The Rights of the Accused
- School Desegregation
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Law and Justice, 1970–1979
