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Gender Attitudes in the Judiciary: Evidence from U.S. Circuit Courts

Gender Attitudes in the Judiciary: Evidence from U.S. Circuit Courts

462/2020 Elliott Ash, Daniel L. Chen and Arianna Ornaghi
political economy, working papers

462/2020 Elliott Ash, Daniel L. Chen and Arianna Ornaghi

Do gender attitudes influence interactions with female judges in U.S. Circuit Courts? In this paper, we propose a novel judge-specific measure of gender attitudes based on use of genderstereotyped language in the judge’s authored opinions. Exploiting quasi-random assignment of judges to cases and conditioning on judges’ characteristics, we validate the measure showing that slanted judges vote more conservatively in gender-related cases. Slant influences interactions with female colleagues: slanted judges are more likely to reverse lower-court decisions if the lower-court judge is a woman than a man, are less likely to assign opinions to female judges, and cite fewer female-authored opinions.

Political Economy