Victoria Nourse Helped Write the Violence Against Women Act. She Knows Policy Change Matters in the Struggle to End Gender-Based Violence.

On the latest episode of Looking Back, Moving Forward, the Georgetown Law professor and vice chair of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights reflected on how VAWA has shifted culture when it comes to gender-based violence—and what tools activists can use now to continue the work.

In the early 1990s, Victoria Nourse became a key part of then-Sen. Joe Biden’s effort to craft the original Violence Against Women Act—which would become, in 1994, the first comprehensive federal law specifically addressing issues of gender-based violence and harassment. Nourse, after working as an attorney in Congress, the White House and the Department of Justice, is now the Ralph V. Whitworth professor in law at Georgetown Law and vice chair of the United States Commission on Civil Rights.

VAWA remains a critical tool in the struggle to end gender-based violence—and a lightning rod for controversy in a time of right-wing backlash against women’s rights.

As part of the fourth episode of the Ms. Studios podcast Looking Back, Moving Forward, I talked to Nourse about the power of policy change in the struggle to end gender-based violence, where she sees opportunities now to continue forward progress, and what the backlash facing survivors shows us about the urgency of ratifying the Equal Rights Amendment.