Legal profession and diversity
- Created by: Nikki
- Created on: 07-04-15 22:03
Barristers
15,600 barristers
Represented by The Bar Council
Regulated by The Bar Standards Board
4/5 in chambers are self-employed
Pupil -- Tenancy -- Junior Counsel -- Queen's Counsel (silk) -- Judge
Solicitors
108,000 with practising certificates
Represented by The Law Society (trade union?)
Regulated by Solicitors' Regulatory Authority
Code of conduct
History
- system of attorneys and solicitors
- solicitors = landed estates
- attorneys advised parties in lawsuits
- two roles combined
- Law Society in 1903
Trainee -- Associate -- Senior Associate -- Salaried partner -- Equity partner
Fragmentation of the profession?
What is diversity?
Best understood not in numbers but in diversity of life experience -- not restricted to numbers but those factors are likely to be indication of expereince whic is different to the norm
Types of diversity
- gender
- sexual orientation
- colour
- ethnicity
- class
- religion
- beyond the bar to soliciors profession and academia?
Aims (Hale)
- equal opportunities (equity)
- to 'make a difference' (difference-based)
- democratic legitimacy (legitimacy)
Reforms in diversity: Constitutional Reform Act 20
Constitutional Reform Act 2005 -- created new appointments process overseen by the Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC)
- design appointments system free from bias
- specific statutory duty to encourage diversity
- judges on JAC, but in minority, and don't act in representative capacity
- chaired by layperson
- Judicial Appointments and Conduct Ombudsman 2006
Reforms: Advisory panel on judicial diversity 2010
- called for 'fundamental shift of approach'
- opposed quotas
- encourage outreach work by judges and professional bodies
- law firms should encourage part time judicial service
- induction programmes
- all posts are capable of being delivered through some form of flexible working arrangement
Judicial Diversity Task Force
- follow up to report
- representatives from MoJ, senior members of Judiciary, JAC, Bar Council, Law Society, and the Chartered Institute of Legal Executives
- several inititatives
- diversity definition expanded to cover religion and sexual orientation
Reforms: HL Constitution Committee
- Select Committee chaired by Baroness Jay
- March 2012
- recognised some progress, BUT:
- targets should be set if progress is not made within 5 years
- judges should have more flexible working practices, career breaks and part-time posts on bench
- 'tipping break' provisions should be used
- 1/20 judges is non-white
- less than 1/4 is female
- greater commitment to encouraging applications from lawyers who are not barristers
Reforms: Crime and Courts Act 2013
- 'tipping point'
- statutory duty for Lord Chancellor and Lord Chief Justice to take such steps as they consider necessary to encourage judicial diversity
- removes disincentive to appointment of part-time senior judges by providing for exisitng statutory limits on number of HC and CA judges to be calculated on basis of full-time equivalents
Diversity in solicitor profession
Black Solicitor's Network
- produced Diversity League Table
- looked at disability, ethinciity, gender and sexual orientation
- over 5 years, representation of women and ethnic minority solicitors has improved
- proportion of ethnic minority partners in law firms is increasing
- 50% trainees are women, 18% of partners are women
Law Society's Diversity Charter
Old Boy's Networks - Sex
Old Boy's Networks, Family Connections and the English Legal Profession (2012)
Sex
- 1st female Lord of Appeal in Ordinary appointed in 2004 -- Baroness Hale
- Hale is first and only female Justice of SC
- increases in females working as solicitors and barristers -- much faster rate of increase for solicitors
- at current rate, parity of sexes: solicitor - 5 years; barrister - 26 years
- bar deters women through its structure
- solicitor profession is more appealing
- women under-represented in private practice - judges traditionally appointed from private practice - indirect discrimination against women
- parity of sexes in QCs will not be achieved this century at current rate
- traditionally HC judges appointed from QCs -- barrier to acces for women
- consideration should be given to appointing HC judges other than from QC exclusively
- only 2% of HC appointments since 2006 have at some time been English solicitors
Old Boy's Networks - Education
Education
- QCs appointed since 1965, only 19% state school -- only 15% of judges
- Clarendon schools
- HC and CA judges educated in state sector remains consistently under 32% since 1965
- most of the period not a single Lord of Appeal in Ordinary who was not an Oxbridge graduate
- better diversity in solicitors -- suggests more judges should be appointed from background of a solicitor
Old Boy's Networks - Family
Family
- QCs and judges come from well-to-do establishment backgrounds --
- 46% QCs and 61% judges fathers' from exclusively professional occupational groups
- 21% QCs and 20% judges fathers' were either managers or company directors
- some HC judges from more modest backgrounds
- Hale - entry level discrimination
- If HC judges continue to be recrutied almost exclusively from Bar then lack of socio-economic diversity will continue
Justifying gender equality on the bench (1)
Difference-based arguments
- importance of what women bring and how this will improve judiciary
- if argument that it would raise quality correct then persuasive -- but inconclusive research on difference and no evidence of improvment
- interpretations of difference depend on your approach
- future of difference -- more or less?
Problems with impartiality and inconsistency
- difficulty reocniling claim of difference in judgemnt with principle of judicial impartiality
- difficulty that different decision making undermines consistency - unfairness at individual level
Problems of essentialism -- what is particular about women's identities and interests -- more similarities in socio-econ; education; successful grads; relatively wealthy; age
Strategic dangers -- assertion that women have paritcular way of practising law recalls old myths that threaten to establish new categories of women's work -- slide from difference to superiority
Justifying gender equality on the bench (2)
Equity argument -- inherently unfair that men enjoy near monopoly of judicial power
Limitations
- problems of translating straightforward and uncontentious principle into practical basis for change
- arguments of unfairness against affirmative action
Solutions
- rethink traditional definition of merit -- SA example -- selection criteria including diversity as a collective requirement of competence and quality of 'potential' taken as criterion of merit
Advantages -- flexible -- not dependent on what female judges may or may not do
Weakness -- more concerned with interests of participants than society as a whole
Needs to be supplemented by legitimacy argument
Justifying gender equality on the bench (3)
Legitimacy argument
Basis of legitimacy of judiciary
- quality of decision making
- demonstration of fair and impartial justice
- (recently) composition
Acceptable category of exclusion is one which limits a peron's ability to do the job well
Public confidence
- should see people like themselves in judiciary
- marginalisation
- idea that judiciary serves wealthy, is remote and out of touch, and lack of confidence in fairness of hearings are all problems
- strong argument -- easier to persuade an institution a change in composition is necessary if its future well-being and authority is dependent on it
Case studies
Supreme Court in 2013
- 10/12 Oxbridge education
- 1 woman
- All white
- All old
Linda Dobbs
- first and only BME to be appointed to senior judiciary
- following her retirement from HC, there are no BME women judges in senior judiciary
Council of Europe: European Judicial Systems (2012)
- gradual feminisation
- only Azerbaijan and Armenia have lower ration than England and Wales
- 23% judges = women in E&W
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