Seems... unnecessary.
Unless I'm missing something, the issues that it could solve can/have been solved in other ways.
The gender issues that have yet to be solved that I can think of won't be fixed by this amendment.
As one example, one existing issue I can think of would be that the legal definition of rape in the US is structured in such a way that it only defines "forced penetration" as rape and not "forced envelopment", which excludes a good portion of male victims and a majority of female perps.
But this amendment wouldn't solve that issue, as the inequality with the law in that example above isn't an issue of the law itself isn't overtly discriminating in terms of sex: IE, the definitions of "rape" used by law do not discriminate between male and female victims as written (as the law does in, say, Israel), but the inequality results from how the act is legally defined.
Unless I'm missing something, the issues that it could solve can/have been solved in other ways.
The gender issues that have yet to be solved that I can think of won't be fixed by this amendment.
As one example, one existing issue I can think of would be that the legal definition of rape in the US is structured in such a way that it only defines "forced penetration" as rape and not "forced envelopment", which excludes a good portion of male victims and a majority of female perps.
But this amendment wouldn't solve that issue, as the inequality with the law in that example above isn't an issue of the law itself isn't overtly discriminating in terms of sex: IE, the definitions of "rape" used by law do not discriminate between male and female victims as written (as the law does in, say, Israel), but the inequality results from how the act is legally defined.