"Winner of the 2016 Philip Taft Labor History Award, Cornell University School of Industrial & Labor Relations"
"Winner of the 2015 William G. Bowen Award, Industrial Relations Section of Princeton University"
"Honorable Mention for the 2015 David J. Langum, Sr. Prize for American Legal History/Biography, Langum Charitable Trust"
"Woloch retells the history of protective legislation as a scholarly page-turner, complete with 'close calls and near misses, false hopes and unintended consequences'. . . . The resulting narrative leaves readers with a deeper appreciation for both the messiness of feminist polities and the power of history as a tool for helping us see the world fresh."---Amy Richter, Law and History Review
"Woloch does a remarkable job of pulling a wide array of disparate events together to form a single narrative supporting her central theme. . . . This text is highly recommended for any university or academic law library."---Miriam A. Murphy, Law Library Journal
"A Class by Herself is a masterful history of interest group politics that shaped government, business and labor relations, and gender politics throughout the twentieth century. Labor organizers, clubwomen, judges, pro-business attorneys, reformers and their lawyer allies, bureaucrats, feminists, and aggrieved workers all receive attention in this superb history of protective labor legislation."---Kathleen A. Laughlin, American Historical Review
"A fascinating story of 'false hopes and unintended consequences.'"---Lara Vapnek, Reviews in American History
"Sophisticated and meticulously researched. . . . The first study to provide a comprehensive view of sex-specific labor laws over their more than century-long existence. Woloch's work will no doubt become indispensible to the history of gendered labor law."---Jan Doolitle Wilson, Journal of American History
"Historian Woloch analyzes the fraught history of protective laws for women workers. She skillfully synthesizes many strands of the historiography of protective legislation while making an original contribution with close analyses of the people and particulars of key court cases and decisions that shaped the reformist and legislative landscape over a century. . . . Woloch deftly illustrates how post-1960, arguments for workplace equality based on 14th Amendment protections ultimately trumped those based on difference--but not without difficulty, as evidenced by debates over maternal health and leave policies."-- "Choice"
"A magisterial achievement. . . . Woloch provides the best analytical trajectory to the litany of contests central to women's legal history."---Eileen Boris, Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era
"As we face the next generation of challenges to women's rights--both within labor and reproduction (and in their intersections)--Woloch's work is essential reading. Moreover, the book's concise summaries invite further scholarship from legal historians, as well as historians of medicine, science, and gender, to unpack the still-unknown details behind so many of the court decisions, legislative efforts, workers' experiences, and reform advocacy. We, as historians, can ask for no better gift than the brilliant departure point that Woloch has given us."---Lauren MacIvor Thompson, H-Net Reviews
"Woloch writes her story as a dramatic battle between equality feminism and protective labor law with equality feminism the victor by the 1990s. . . . To the well-known story of how equal-rights thinking triumphed over single-sex protections through the broadening of the FLSA, women's increasing labor-force participation, and feminist activism around Title VII, Woloch adds much."---Robyn Muncy, Labor: Studies in Working-Class History
"A Class by Herself is a work which should be read by all those with an interest in the employment of women and human rights more generally."---Braham Dabscheck, Labour History
"Nancy Woloch has written the definitive history of sex-specific labor legislation, a cornerstone of gendered public policy in the twentieth century."---Katherine Turk, WCW