Answer:
Women's rights have historically been restricted by the Supreme Court using the reasonableness standard.
Explanation:
The reasonableness standard is used in US courts to understand whether a plaintiff or defendant acted reasonably in a harassment situation, for example, and it has been used in cases against police where the plaintiff claims excessive violence was used. There is also the "reasonable woman standard" that has been used in US Supreme Court Cases like Harris vs. Forklift Systems 510 US 17 (1993). The Supreme Court sided in favor of Harris who had to appeal two lower court decisions that found that Harris was not sufficiently psychologically impacted for the case to constitute harassment. The reasonableness standard can be seen as limiting because it imposes the standards of what men find reasonable in a sexual situation and coworker relationship at the expense of what women may find uncomfortable or inappropriate.
They lived in Northern California , from the Pacific Ocean to Clear Lake .
<span>James
Meredith won a case in 1962 that enabled him to enlist in the University of
Mississippi, or as nicknamed Ole Miss. The Uni. had beforehand been all-white,
and it was a major ordeal that he won the case and was permitted there. When he
arrived, he was not allowed in; President Kennedy commanded that he be taken to
the registrar's office.</span>