Headquarters | London, New York |
---|---|
Major practice areas | civil litigation, employment, discrimination, sexual abuse, higher education, online reputation, family law, corporate and commercial, business law |
Key people | Ann Olivarius, Jef McAllister |
Date founded | 1996 |
Founder | Ann Olivarius |
Website | mcolaw |
McAllister Olivarius is an international law firm dual-headquartered in London and New York. [1] It specializes in civil litigation and plaintiff work, particularly in education and employment law.
Founded in 1996, McAllister Olivarius is one of the only feminist-run and managed law firms in the world. [2] As of 2022, women represented 75% of the firm's full time legal staff. The firm is currently led by Dr. Ann Olivarius, Chair of the Executive Committee and Dr. Jef McAllister, Managing Partner.
The firm is best known for representing plaintiffs in discrimination lawsuits against large institutions, including Mount Sinai Health System, [3] the University of Rochester, [4] UCLA, [5] the University of Illinois, [6] the University of Oxford, [7] [8] the University of Warwick, [9] and Celebrity Cruises, [10] as well as for prominent individuals such as Chrissy Chambers. [11] [12]
McAllister Olivarius lawyers, working through their former separate brand AO Advocates, are also known for representing victims of sex abuse and historic child sex abuse. They have successfully pursued claims against established religious bodies including the Catholic Church, [13] Jehovah's Witnesses, [14] [15] certain sects of Buddhists [16] and Hindus, [17] and ultra-Orthodox or Haredi Judaism, [18] and against a number of care homes and schools. [2]
In March 2020, McAllister Olivarius settled a $9.4 million on behalf of nine former professors and students for alleged retaliation by the university after they filed sexual misconduct claims against Professor T. Florian Jaeger. [19] This case was described as "high-profile" lawsuit "closely watched by other institutions of higher educations" by Science. [20] In December 2017, Celeste Kidd and Jessica Cantlon, plaintiffs in the case, were named as "Persons of the Year" by TIME Magazine as part of its cover story on the MeToo movement. [21]
In 2016, the firm settled a case brought against UCLA by two female graduate students after the university had allowed history professor Gabriel Piterberg, who they had accused of sexual harassment, to return to campus. [22] McAllister Olivarius showed that the university had failed to follow proper procedures in handling the complaint and received a settlement for the plaintiffs. [5]
AO Advocates, a sister firm which is now fully part of McAllister Olivarius, brought the UK's first successful civil case against the Jehovah's Witnesses, winning compensation for a woman who claimed the religion's elders failed to protect her from sex abuse carried out by a pedophile. [15] The firm has also represented a former Buddhist nun in her sexual assault claims against the 17th Karmapa Ogyen Trinley Dorje, a revered leader of Tibetan Buddhism. [23]
In the first civil case of its kind to be brought in England and Wales, McAllister Olivarius won "landmark" damages for YouTube star Chrissy Chambers after her former partner uploaded revenge pornography videos of her to the internet. [11] The firm has since built a revenge porn and intimate image abuse practice, and its attorneys are often quoted in the press on cyber-abuse [24] and speak at events. [25]
In 2019, McAllister Olivarius won a victory for Reena and Sandeep Mander, a British-born couple of Sikh heritage who had been deemed "unsuitable" potential adopters by a UK adoption service due to their "Indian background." The case resulted in the Manders being awarded £120,000 in damages and led to a review of how other local councils handle adoptions. [26]
After it emerged that male students at the University of Warwick had used a Facebook chat group to exchange rape threats relating to fellow female students, and the University's investigation was shown to be seriously inadequate, McAllister Olivarius sued for discrimination and negligence. [9]
In 2020, the firm partnered with The 1752 Group, a British research and consultancy organization dedicated to ending staff sexual harassment and abuse in higher education. Together, they released a guide in 2020 on "Sector Guidance to Address Staff Sexual Misconduct In UK Higher Education." [27]
The firm was cited in the 2021 UK Law Commission report on legal reforms to address intimate image abuse. [28] The firm also The firm also assisted Baroness Uddin, Member of the House of Lords, in passing the 2021 UK Domestic Abuse Act. [29]
Attorneys from the firm have appeared in the news advocating for legal reforms and better enforcement of Title IX [30] and its equivalent law in the UK, the Equality Act 2010. [31]
In an ongoing case, the firm brought suit against the University of Illinois on behalf of two Chinese students for "ignoring their claims of sexual abuse and subjecting them to trafficking." [32]
The firm's founder, Dr. Ann Olivarius, was a plaintiff in Alexander v. Yale, [33] the first case to hold that universities had a legal duty to combat sexual harassment under Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972.
Title IX is a landmark federal civil rights law in the United States that was enacted as part of the Education Amendments of 1972. It prohibits sex-based discrimination in any school or any other education program that receives funding from the federal government. This is Public Law No. 92‑318, 86 Stat. 235, codified at 20 U.S.C. §§ 1681–1688.
The University of South Alabama (USA) is a public research university in Mobile, Alabama. It was created by the Alabama Legislature in May 1963, and replaced existing extension programs operated in Mobile by the University of Alabama. The first classes were held in June 1964, with an enrollment of 276 students; the first commencement was held in June 1967, with 88 bachelor's degrees awarded.
Gloria Rachel Allred is an American attorney known for taking high-profile and often controversial cases, particularly those involving feminist causes. She has been inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame.
The Diocese of Charlotte is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory, or diocese, of the Catholic Church in western North Carolina in the United States. It is a suffragan diocese of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Atlanta.
Sexual harassment in education in the United States is an unwelcome behavior of a sexual nature that interferes with an American student's ability to learn, study, work or participate in school activities. It is common in middle and high schools in the United States. Sexual or gender harassment is a form of discrimination under Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. Sexual harassment involves a range of behavior from mild annoyances to unwanted touching and, in extreme cases, rape or other sexual assault.
Kirkwood High School is a public secondary school in Kirkwood, Missouri, United States. The school is part of the Kirkwood R-7 School District.
John L. Comaroff is Professor of African and African American Studies and of Anthropology, Oppenheimer Fellow in African Studies at Harvard University. He is recognised for his study of African and African-American society. Comaroff and his wife, anthropologist Jean Comaroff, have collaborated on publications examining post-colonialism and the Tswana people of South Africa. He has written several texts describing his research and has presented peer-reviewed anthropological theories of African cultures that have relevance to understanding global society.
Alexander v. Yale, 631 F.2d 178, was the first use of Title IX of the United States Education Amendments of 1972 in charges of sexual harassment against an educational institution. It further established that sexual harassment of female students could be considered sex discrimination, and was thus illegal.
Ann Olivarius is an American-British lawyer who specializes in cases of civil litigation, sexual discrimination, and sexual harassment, assault, and abuse.
Joshua Daniel Wright is an American economist, attorney, and former government official. Wright served as a commissioner of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) from 2013 to 2015. At the time of his nomination, Wright was the fourth economist to serve as an FTC commissioner. Wright was a professor of law at George Mason University's Antonin Scalia Law School between 2004 and 2023, and was the executive director of its Global Antitrust Institute (GAI). In 2023, Wright resigned from George Mason following eight allegations of sexual misconduct from former students.
Revenge porn is the distribution of sexually explicit images or videos of individuals without their consent. The material may have been made by a partner in an intimate relationship with the knowledge and consent of the subject at the time, or it may have been made without their knowledge. The subject may have experienced sexual violence during the recording of the material, in some cases facilitated by narcotics such as date rape drugs which also cause a reduced sense of pain and involvement in the sexual act, dissociative effects and amnesia. The possession of the material may be used by the perpetrators to blackmail the subjects into performing other sexual acts, to coerce them into continuing a relationship or to punish them for ending one, to silence them, to damage their reputation, and/or for financial gain. In the wake of civil lawsuits and the increasing numbers of reported incidents, legislation has been passed in a number of countries and jurisdictions to outlaw the practice, though approaches have varied and been changed over the years. The practice has also been described as a form of psychological abuse and domestic violence, as well as a form of sexual abuse.
Clare Mary Smith McGlynn is a Professor of Law at Durham University in the UK. She specialises in the legal regulation of pornography, image-based sexual abuse, cyberflashing, online abuse, violence against women, and gender equality in the legal profession. In 2020, she was appointed an Honorary KC in recognition of her work on women's equality in the legal profession and shaping new criminal laws on extreme pornography and image-based sexual abuse. She was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from Lund University, Sweden, in 2018 in recognition of the international impact of her research on sexual violence and she is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences. She is a member of the UK Parliament's Independent Expert Panel hearing appeals in cases of sexual misconduct, bullying and harassment against MPs. She has given evidence before Scottish, Northern Irish and UK Parliaments on how to reform laws on sexual violence and online abuse, as well as speaking to policy audiences across Europe, Asia and Australia. In November 2019, she was invited to South Korea to share international best practice in supporting victims of image-based sexual abuse and she has worked with Facebook, TikTok and Google to support their policies on non-consensual intimate images.
In April 2013, Emma Sulkowicz, an American fourth-year visual arts major at Columbia University in New York City, filed a complaint with Columbia University requesting expulsion of fellow fourth-year student and German national, Paul Nungesser, alleging he had raped Sulkowicz in her dorm room on August 27, 2012. Nungesser was found not responsible by a university inquiry.
#MeToo is a social movement and awareness campaign against sexual abuse, sexual harassment and rape culture, in which people publicize their experiences of sexual abuse or sexual harassment. The phrase "Me Too" was initially used in this context on social media in 2006, on Myspace, by sexual assault survivor and activist Tarana Burke. The hashtag #MeToo was used starting in 2017 as a way to draw attention to the magnitude of the problem. "Me Too" is meant to empower those who have been sexually assaulted through empathy, solidarity and strength in numbers, by visibly demonstrating how many have experienced sexual assault and harassment, especially in the workplace.
Debra S. Katz is an American civil rights and employment lawyer and a founding partner of Katz Banks Kumin in Washington, D.C. She is best known for representing alleged victims of sexual assault and sexual harassment, notably Christine Blasey Ford, Charlotte Bennett, Vanessa Tyson, Chloe Caras, and accusers of Congressmen Pat Meehan and Eric Massa, and whistleblowers facing retaliation, including most recently Dr. Rick Bright. Katz's primary practice areas at her firm are employment and whistleblower law, where she represents victims of workplace discrimination and retaliation.
The 1752 Group is a UK-based research and lobby organisation working to end sexual misconduct in higher education.
Carrie Goldberg is an American lawyer specializing in sex crimes with her law firm C.A. Goldberg PLLC. She has represented: five clients who described sexual abuse committed by Harvey Weinstein; the former Democrat Member of Congress Katie Hill after her naked photos were published in the media; and the author Emma Cline after an ex-partner sued for plagiarism. Her legal cases with low-profile individuals—involving revenge porn, intimate partner violence and online abuse—often draw national media attention.
Douglas Holden Wigdor is a founding partner of the law firm Wigdor LLP, and works as a litigator in New York City, specializing in anti-discrimination law. Wigdor is best known for representing seven victims of alleged sexual abuse by Harvey Weinstein, the hotel maid in the Dominique Strauss-Kahn sexual assault case, over twenty employees at Fox News in sexual harassment and discrimination cases, and NFL coaches Brian Flores, Steve Wilks, and Ray Horton in a 2022 class action lawsuit against the National Football League alleging racist and discriminatory practices against Black coaches.
Nobody's Victim: Fighting Psychos, Stalkers, Pervs, and Trolls is a 2019 book by Carrie Goldberg, co-written with Jeannine Amber. It describes incidents of sexual violence experienced by Goldberg's clients and herself, as well as other famous cases. The acts of violence include rape and sexual assault, revenge porn, "doxing", "swatting", "sextortion", and abusive messages. Goldberg categorizes perpetrators as "assholes", "psychos", "pervs" or "trolls" depending on their nature, though "assholes" was omitted in the book's subtitle to avoid profanity.
Joseph Cammarata is an American attorney mainly known for handling the high-profile case against President Bill Clinton, in which he represented Paula Jones in a sexual harassment lawsuit against President Clinton. Cammarata also represented seven women who alleged they were sexually assaulted by Bill Cosby in a defamation lawsuit.
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