Meyer went on to attend Radcliffe College (Harvard University) in Cambridge, Massachusetts. At Radcliffe, she became a passionate feminist and anti-Vietnam War activist. She joined a feminist group called Bread and Roses. Meyer states that, “our early talk was about how women always ended up with purple hands from running the mimeo machines rather than serving as leading speakers or scholars…from there it was a short hop to the role of law in promoting male dominance.”[3]
To conclude: President Pusey and the Corporation want ROTC to stay because they support the U.S. military and the policies it carries out; we feel that ROTC must go because we oppose the policies of the United States and we oppose the military that perpetrates them. The lines are clearly drawn; the time to take sides is now.[5]
For her role in the protest Meyer was arrested and convicted but later acquitted. She graduated cum laude from Radcliffe in 1969. Following graduation, she participated in the building of Arcosanti, an experimental town in central Arizona spearheaded by the well-known Italian architect, Paolo Soleri, who sought to minimize the effect of urbanization on the natural environment.[6]
In the summer of 1971, before starting Rutgers Law School, Meyer joined the National Lawyers Guild, after being “recruited by a funky group of lawyers who were talking law and politics at a diner where [she] stopped en route from Chicago to New Jersey.”[7] While in law school, she remained active in public protest and organizing, enrolling in the urban poverty, gender and law, and constitutional law clinics. As part of her clinic work, she wrote an appellate brief to help halt U.S. intervention in the Cambodian Civil War.[8] In addition, she worked for a local chapter of the Black Lung Association in Beckley, West Virginia.[9] Meyer graduated with a J.D. from Rutgers in 1974.[10]
Career
Following law school, Meyer worked in-house at the national office of the National Lawyers Guild in New York City.[11] In 1975, with a small group of fellow lawyers, Meyer co-founded the law collective, Gladstein, Meyer & Reif (now incorporated as Gladstein, Reif, & Meginniss, LLP).[12] Meyer left after two years and led the first U.S. delegation of lawyers (under the auspices of the National Lawyers Guild) to China, in the normalization of China–United States relations.[13][14]
Meyer went on to study at Yale University, after having been inspired by a night course in American legal history taught by the legal historian and law professor, Morton Horwitz. She received her LLM from Yale in 1988, at which point Meyer joined the New York Law School faculty as a professor.[19]
——— (1999). "Women and the Internet". Texas Journal of Women and the Law. 8 (2): 305–324.
——— (2002). "International Labor Standards in the WTO's New World Order: Towards Development-Based Standard Setting". Guild Practitioner. 59 (1): 21–30.
——— (2003). "Who Cares: Reflections on Law, Loss, and Family Values in the Wake of 9/11". New York Law School Law Review. 46 (3, 4): 653–664.
——— (2003). "Not Whistlin' Dixie: Now, More Than Ever, We Need Feminist Law Journals". Columbia Journal of Gender and Law. 12 (3): 539–545.
——— (2008). "Brain, Gender, Law: A Cautionary Tale". New York Law School Law Review. 53 (4): 995–1010.