Volume 93, Number 3 – May 2013
CONTENTS
SYMPOSIUM
EVALUATING CLAIMS ABOUT THE “END OF MEN”: LEGAL AND OTHER PERSPECTIVES
Editors’ Foreword
Page 663
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
The End of Men and the Rise of Women
Hanna Rosin
Page 667
COMMENTATORS ON KEYNOTE ADDRESS
Are African Americans Us?
Ralph Richard Banks
Page 681
Is It the End of Men, or Are Men Still in Power? Yes!
Michael Kimmel
Page 689
ADDRESS
The End of Men?: Gender Flux in the Face of Precarious Masculinity
Joan C. Williams
Page 699
PANEL I: ONE YEARS OF THE “END OF MEN”: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
The Rhetoric of Gender Upheaval During the Campaign for the Nineteenth Amendment
Lynda G. Dodd
Page 709
Historicizing the “End of Men”: The Politics of Reaction(s)
Serena Mayeri
Page 729
Manhood Rights in the Age of Jim Crow: Evaluating “End-of-Men” Claims in the Context of African American History
Martin Summers
Page 745
PANEL II: EMPLOYMENT
Biological Sex Differences in the Workplace: Reports of the “End of Men” Are Greatly Exaggerated (as Are Claims of Women’s Continued Inequality)
Kingsley R. Browne
Page 769
Masculinity, Labor, and Sexual Power
Ann C. McGinley
Page 795
A Labor Economist’s Response to Hann Rosin’s “End-of-Men” Hypothesis; Table 1; Table 2; Table 3
William M. Rodgers III
Page 815
Can All Women Be Pharmacists?: A Critique of Hanna Rosin’s The End of Men
Michael Selmi & Sonia Weil
Page 851
PANEL III: FAMILY
The End of Men or the Rebirth of Class?
June Carbone & Naomi Cahn
Page 871
Forgotten Fathers
Daniel L. Hatcher
Page 897
The Other Marriage Equality Problem
Linda C. McClain
Page 921
PANEL IV: EDUCATION
Rights and Wrongs in the Debate over Single-Sex Schooling
Rosemary Salomone
Page 971
Bullying Prevention and Boyhood
Katharine B. Silbaugh
Page 1029
PANEL V: COMPARATIVE AND INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE “END OF MEN”
No End in Sight: Politics, Paradox, and Gender Policies in Iran
Shahla Haeri
Page 1049
Israel’s Rosit the Riveter: Between Secular Law and Jewish Law
Pnina Lahav
Page 1063
Situating Women in Counterterrorism Discourses: Undulating Masculinities and Luminal Femininities
Fionnuala Ní Aoláin
Page 1085
Gender Quotas After the End of Men
Julie C. Suk
Page 1123
PANEL VI: COULD THESE BOTH BE TRUE?: RECONCILING THE “END OF MEN” WITH WOMEN’S CONTINUING INEQUALITY
TANF and the End (Maybe?) of Poor Men
Khiara M. Bridges
Page 1141
The End of Men Is Not True: What Is Not and What Might Be on the Road Toward Gender Equality; Online Appendices
Philip N. Cohen
Page 1059
We Are Always Already Imprisoned: Hyper-Incarceration and Black Male Identity Performance
Frank Rudy Cooper
Page 1185
What Men?: The Essentialist Error of the “End of Men”
Nancy E. Dowd
Page 1205