In January 2004 Baroness Brenda Hale became the first woman to sit on the Appellate Committee of the House of Lords. Five years on, she has brought to her judicial role a lightness of touch that belies her increasingly significant impact on the court's jurisprudence. Early forecasts that she would be "just a bit different" from her male companions have proved prophetic. However such assessments have stemmed primarily from a focus on her decision-making on a case-by-case basis. But what of her jurisprudence as a whole? This paper considers arguments for a more sustained and coherent methodological approach to analyses of Baroness Hale's (and other judges') jurisprudence as a framework through which to better understand and explore the potent...
The UK has not achieved the judicial diversity of other common law jurisdictions. Whilst there is so...
Dr Rachel O’Cahill-Callaghan discusses the need for demographic diversity in the Supreme Court and a...
This article examines whether the gender balance on the High Court of Australia has disrupted the ge...
In January 2004 Baroness Brenda Hale became the first woman to sit on the Appellate Committee of the...
Taking the UK Ministry of Justice’s ongoing quest to ensure a more diverse judiciary as its starting...
Taking the UK Ministry of Justice’s ongoing quest to ensure a more diverse judiciary as its starting...
Taking the media reaction to Brenda Hale's appointment to the appellate committee of the House of Lo...
Taking the UK Ministry of Justice’s ongoing quest to ensure a more diverse judiciary as its starting...
Taking the media reaction to Brenda Hale’s appointment to the appellate committee of the House of Lo...
There are many measures by which Lady Hale’s status as a towering judge may be established. She was ...
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licen...
A decade and a half on from Lord Taylor’s promise that “there will be more [female judges]… and they...
Awarded the 2013 Birks Book Prize by the Society of Legal Scholars, Women, Judging and the Judiciary...
Discusses the debate over the need for a greater judicial diversity of experiences, referring to sug...
Discusses the debate over the need for a greater judicial diversity of experiences, referring to sug...
The UK has not achieved the judicial diversity of other common law jurisdictions. Whilst there is so...
Dr Rachel O’Cahill-Callaghan discusses the need for demographic diversity in the Supreme Court and a...
This article examines whether the gender balance on the High Court of Australia has disrupted the ge...
In January 2004 Baroness Brenda Hale became the first woman to sit on the Appellate Committee of the...
Taking the UK Ministry of Justice’s ongoing quest to ensure a more diverse judiciary as its starting...
Taking the UK Ministry of Justice’s ongoing quest to ensure a more diverse judiciary as its starting...
Taking the media reaction to Brenda Hale's appointment to the appellate committee of the House of Lo...
Taking the UK Ministry of Justice’s ongoing quest to ensure a more diverse judiciary as its starting...
Taking the media reaction to Brenda Hale’s appointment to the appellate committee of the House of Lo...
There are many measures by which Lady Hale’s status as a towering judge may be established. She was ...
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licen...
A decade and a half on from Lord Taylor’s promise that “there will be more [female judges]… and they...
Awarded the 2013 Birks Book Prize by the Society of Legal Scholars, Women, Judging and the Judiciary...
Discusses the debate over the need for a greater judicial diversity of experiences, referring to sug...
Discusses the debate over the need for a greater judicial diversity of experiences, referring to sug...
The UK has not achieved the judicial diversity of other common law jurisdictions. Whilst there is so...
Dr Rachel O’Cahill-Callaghan discusses the need for demographic diversity in the Supreme Court and a...
This article examines whether the gender balance on the High Court of Australia has disrupted the ge...