In this special issue selected presentations from the symposium celebrating the twentieth anniversary of the Feminism and Legal Theory Project. The project was founded in 1984 by professor Martha A. Fineman. Fineman's vision created and sustains the rich tradition of focusing a feminist, legal and theoretical lens on issues ranging from the socio-economic and geopolitical to the institutional and metaphysical.
Discussion of the role of technology in feminism both in the past and the present. This collection explores both the advances and setbacks of technology - including breast pump, egg freezing and in vitro fertilization - for women, sexually, biologically, economically and politically. It considers not only whether or not a radical, emancipatory feminism is possible today but what such a feminism might look like.