2011
DOI: 10.1017/s000842391000106x
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Women Lawyers before the Supreme Court of Canada

Abstract: American and Canadian scholars have found significant evidence of gender bias in the legal system, including the legal profession~ABA, 2007; studying lawyer gender bias in the US have recently inquired as to whether gender bias against women lawyers has crept into the decisional processes of the US Supreme Court~USSCT!. Specifically, a study conducted by Szmer and colleagues~2010! indicates that women lawyers are not disadvantaged in finding success on case outcomes but does suggest that conservative justices … Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…While women occupy an increasing number of seats on the federal bench (Slotnick et al 2017) and constitute roughly 50 percent of recent law school graduates (American Bar Association 2016), relatively few women argue at the Supreme Court (Sarver, Kaheny, and Szmer 2008). Because of the low numbers of women at the Court, gender remains salient during oral arguments (e.g., Kaheny, Szmer, and Sarver 2011; Shih et al 1999). Under these conditions, it is likely gender norms will be enforced.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While women occupy an increasing number of seats on the federal bench (Slotnick et al 2017) and constitute roughly 50 percent of recent law school graduates (American Bar Association 2016), relatively few women argue at the Supreme Court (Sarver, Kaheny, and Szmer 2008). Because of the low numbers of women at the Court, gender remains salient during oral arguments (e.g., Kaheny, Szmer, and Sarver 2011; Shih et al 1999). Under these conditions, it is likely gender norms will be enforced.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These are, at first blush, nongendered markers of quality; however, female attorneys are underrepresented at the Supreme Court Bar (Sarver, Kaheny, and Szmer 2008) and in the law clerk corps (Kromphardt 2017). Thus, it is tempting to say that greater representation of women at the Court will lead to more success as they will accrue greater experience and presumably be hired by better firms (e.g., Kaheny, Szmer, and Sarver 2011; Kenney 2002). However, there is little to assess this expectation with since, save for a few studies, gender is conspicuously absent from the predictors of oral argument attorney success.…”
Section: Oral Arguments and Attorney Gendermentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Studies of juror reactions to female attorneys point to gendered perceptions of lawyers who influence assessments of capability, expertise, and intelligence (Sumoski, ; Hahn and Clayton, ; but see Cohen and Peterson, ; Sigal et al., ). However, the research provides mixed evidence on the question of whether female advocates are less successful in the courtroom (Szmer et al., ; Szmer, Saver, and Kaheny, ; Kaheny, Szmer, and Sarver, ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%