The March 1993 vote of the Judicial Conference of the United States endorsing the provision of the proposed Violence Against Women Act that encouraged circuit judicial councils to conduct studies with respect to gender bias in their respective circuits provided an official imprimatur of approval to such inquiries by the policy making body of the federal courts. Thereafter, the extent to which each federal circuit undertook to accept the invitation to proceed may have depended in large part on the zeal for the inquiry by the chief judge of the circuit or his or her delegated committee
The Judicial Council Advisory Committee on Gender Bias in the Courts was appointed by two Chief Just...
In the 1980s, states began to study racial and ethnic bias in their judicial systems. Now that more ...
The Commission on Gender, Justice, and the Courts was established by the Maine Supreme Judicial Cour...
In 1993, at the request of then Chief Judge Jon O. Newman, the Judicial Council of the Second Circui...
Beginning with the state courts of New Jersey in 1984, almost every state in the country and numerou...
In 1993, the Women Judges Fund for Justice, the National Association of Women Judges, and the Nation...
The District of Columbia Circuit became the first federal circuit to establish a Task Force on race ...
In 1990, the federal courts of the Ninth Circuit began to examine the effects of gender on the busin...
In October 1993, in response to a recommendation in the Report of the National Commission on Judicia...
In July of 1993, the Judicial Council of the Eighth Circuit adopted a resolution for the creation of...
In 1993 the Eleventh Circuit Judicial Council\u27s Task Force on Gender Bias was established. It was...
The recent Report of the Second Circuit Task Force on Gender, Racial, and Ethnic Fairness in the Cou...
The Tenth Circuit Study of Gender Bias and Sexual Harassment was initiated in September 1995 with a ...
When the Ninth Circuit Gender Bias Task Force released its report at the Circuit\u27s 1992 Judicial ...
Symposium: Seventh Annual Conference of the National Association of Women Judges: Conference Present...
The Judicial Council Advisory Committee on Gender Bias in the Courts was appointed by two Chief Just...
In the 1980s, states began to study racial and ethnic bias in their judicial systems. Now that more ...
The Commission on Gender, Justice, and the Courts was established by the Maine Supreme Judicial Cour...
In 1993, at the request of then Chief Judge Jon O. Newman, the Judicial Council of the Second Circui...
Beginning with the state courts of New Jersey in 1984, almost every state in the country and numerou...
In 1993, the Women Judges Fund for Justice, the National Association of Women Judges, and the Nation...
The District of Columbia Circuit became the first federal circuit to establish a Task Force on race ...
In 1990, the federal courts of the Ninth Circuit began to examine the effects of gender on the busin...
In October 1993, in response to a recommendation in the Report of the National Commission on Judicia...
In July of 1993, the Judicial Council of the Eighth Circuit adopted a resolution for the creation of...
In 1993 the Eleventh Circuit Judicial Council\u27s Task Force on Gender Bias was established. It was...
The recent Report of the Second Circuit Task Force on Gender, Racial, and Ethnic Fairness in the Cou...
The Tenth Circuit Study of Gender Bias and Sexual Harassment was initiated in September 1995 with a ...
When the Ninth Circuit Gender Bias Task Force released its report at the Circuit\u27s 1992 Judicial ...
Symposium: Seventh Annual Conference of the National Association of Women Judges: Conference Present...
The Judicial Council Advisory Committee on Gender Bias in the Courts was appointed by two Chief Just...
In the 1980s, states began to study racial and ethnic bias in their judicial systems. Now that more ...
The Commission on Gender, Justice, and the Courts was established by the Maine Supreme Judicial Cour...