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Justice Was Her Calling
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20 October 2026

Before Ruth Bader Ginsburg persuaded the Supreme Court to strike down sex discrimination, Dorothy Kenyon built the legal blueprint.
Justice Was Her Calling is the first full-length biography of the New York judge, lawyer, and civil liberties champion whose litigation strategies helped transform the equal protection clause into a powerful tool for women’s rights. Across decades, from the Progressive Era through the New Deal and into the rise of second-wave feminism, Dorothy Kenyon stood at the forefront of reform.
A longtime ACLU national board member, the only woman appointed by the League of Nations to study women’s legal status worldwide, and a US delegate to the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women, she pushed equality onto the global stage long before it was widely embraced. Her career was nearly undone when Senator Joseph McCarthy named her the first alleged communist. Though fully cleared, the accusation cast a lasting shadow.
Drawing on letters, speeches, and fresh archival research, Jennifer L. Brinkley restores Kenyon to her rightful status as a legal pioneer and reminds us that civil liberties endure only when defended.
Contents
Preface
Abbreviations
Timeline of Important Events
Introduction
1. Do Right, Be Brave: A Gilded Beginning
2. Becoming a Portia: Ladies at the Bar
3. A Cooperative Association: Free Love and Loss
4. A Maverick and Public Servant: Lawyer and Judge
5. Named First: Accused by McCarthy
6. The Aftermath: McCarthyism Hasn’t Left Us Yet
7. Not a Feminist: Organizing for Protective Legislation
8. A Glorious Rebel: The Importance of the ACLU
9. A Gutsy Fighter: Sex Equality and Jury Service
10. Life Is Sweet and Life Is Sour: The Later Years
11. Saying Goodbye: A Life Richly Lived
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index