Answer:
The reason Ginsburg is called the "architect of women's rights movement" was due to her being active role that helped promote sex equality in the law with actions such including;
1) Co-founding the Women's Rights Project at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in 1973
2) Assuming the post of the general counsel of the Women's Rights Project in 1973, and taking part in more than 300 gender discrimination cases between 1973 and 1974
3) Argued in court on gender discriminatory statutes within the law, with a strategy of building on her victories to tackle further discriminatory statutes, specifically, statutes that imply that women are to depend on men
4) Her advocacy resulted in the abolition of gender discrimination in several legal related aspects
5) She wrote the brief for the case Reed v. Reed that led to the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment being applied to women as well as it was to men
6) She argued and won five out of six gender discrimination cases put before the Supreme Court between 1973 and 1976.
Step-by-step explanation: