This article explores the impact of race, gender, age, and intersectionality on attorneys’ perceptions of unfair treatment by other lawyers and on satisfaction with their legal careers. Using an original survey of over 2,000 attorneys, ordered logit is utilized to analyze attorneys’ perceptions of disparate treatment based on race, gender, and age and to test whether minority female attorneys face unique barriers within their professional relationships. We find that minority women are more likely than others to perceive unfair treatment based on race, gender, and age. This also contributes to lower career satisfaction for attorneys who are women of color than for other groups. The findings have important implications for understanding attor...
Formal barriers to entering legal education and the legal profession have crumbled over the past twe...
Women consistently represent over fifty percent of entering law school classes, and one-third of all...
This Article calls attention to a different, heretofore unacknowledged source of racial disadvantage...
Perception of discrimination in the legal profession Author: Sabrina Collins Faculty: Dr. Laura Moye...
This study is conducted in response to the national attention to the underrepresentation of women an...
Studies typically find that lawyers have high job satisfaction and that women are not less satisfied...
In 2004, the Indiana Supreme Court Race and Gender Commission undertook a large survey of lawyers\u2...
One irony of this nation\u27s continuing struggle for diversity and gender equity in employment is t...
For the purpose of this research, minorities are defined as both racial and ethnic categories that a...
Gender representation in the context of large law firms has received extensive scholarly attention a...
Women of color are already severely underrepresented in legal academia; as enrollment drops and lega...
We analyzed sentencing data from sixteen years of criminal trials in the State of Colorado, consisti...
This article presents the results generated from the North Carolina Survey of Attorneys. The focus o...
Do gender and age stereotypes influence the way we perceive attorneys? After reading a passage featu...
The purpose of this study was to investigate the direct and indirect relationships between workplace...
Formal barriers to entering legal education and the legal profession have crumbled over the past twe...
Women consistently represent over fifty percent of entering law school classes, and one-third of all...
This Article calls attention to a different, heretofore unacknowledged source of racial disadvantage...
Perception of discrimination in the legal profession Author: Sabrina Collins Faculty: Dr. Laura Moye...
This study is conducted in response to the national attention to the underrepresentation of women an...
Studies typically find that lawyers have high job satisfaction and that women are not less satisfied...
In 2004, the Indiana Supreme Court Race and Gender Commission undertook a large survey of lawyers\u2...
One irony of this nation\u27s continuing struggle for diversity and gender equity in employment is t...
For the purpose of this research, minorities are defined as both racial and ethnic categories that a...
Gender representation in the context of large law firms has received extensive scholarly attention a...
Women of color are already severely underrepresented in legal academia; as enrollment drops and lega...
We analyzed sentencing data from sixteen years of criminal trials in the State of Colorado, consisti...
This article presents the results generated from the North Carolina Survey of Attorneys. The focus o...
Do gender and age stereotypes influence the way we perceive attorneys? After reading a passage featu...
The purpose of this study was to investigate the direct and indirect relationships between workplace...
Formal barriers to entering legal education and the legal profession have crumbled over the past twe...
Women consistently represent over fifty percent of entering law school classes, and one-third of all...
This Article calls attention to a different, heretofore unacknowledged source of racial disadvantage...