Biography
Bibliography|
Courses
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Frances Elisabeth Olsen
Professor of Law
B.A. Goddard College, 1968 J.D. University of Colorado, 1971 S.J.D. Harvard, 1984 UCLA Law faculty since 1984 olsen@law.ucla.edu |
Frances Olsen teaches
Feminist Legal Theory, Dissidence & Law, Family Law, and
Torts. Her areas of research interest include legal theory, social change, and feminism.
During law school, Professor Olsen did legal aid work for migrant farm workers in Colorado and was the notes & comments editor of the
University of Colorado Law Review. She then clerked for the Chief Judge of the U.S. District Court in Colorado. She represented Native Americans at Wounded Knee in 1973. She established the first feminist public interest law firm in Denver, and, from 1981 to 1983 while an S.J.D. student, founded a legal academic women's group, the Fem-Crits, which spread across the country. She has taught courses in feminist legal theory at Harvard, Oxford, Cambridge, Berlin, Frankfurt, Tokyo, Jerusalem, and at other universities in the U.S., France, Italy, Japan, and Israel. She was a Fellow at Oxford University in 1987 and holds a life Fellowship at Churchill College, Cambridge University. She has lectured throughout the world.
Professor Olsen has edited
Feminist Legal Theory I: Foundations and Outlooks and
II: Positioning Feminist Theory Within the Law (1995). In addition to writing some 100 articles published world-wide, including in the
Harvard Law Review and
Yale Law Journal, she co-authored
Cases and Materials on Family Law: Legal Concepts and Changing Human Relationships (with Weyrauch and Katz, 1994).