Detailing Judicial Difference |
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Authors: | Erika Rackley |
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Affiliation: | (1) School of Law, Durham University, 50 North Bailey, Durham, DH1 3ET, UK |
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Abstract: | 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 potential of judicial difference and to better inform current debates about increasing judicial diversity in England and Wales. |
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Keywords: | Baroness Hale Difference Diversity House of Lords Woman judge |
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