ABSTRACT

This book seeks to understand how women judges are situated as legal knowers on the High Court of Australia by asking whether a near-equal gender balance on the High Court has disrupted the Court’s historically masculinist gender regime.

This book examines how the High Court’s gender regime operates once there is more than one woman on the bench. It explores the following questions: How have the Court’s gender relations accommodated the presence women on the bench? How have the women themselves accommodated those pre-existing gender relations? How might legal judgments and reasoning change as a result of changing gender dynamics on the bench? To develop answers to these (and other) questions the book pursues a methodology that conceptualises the High Court as an institution with a particular gender regime shaped historically by the dominant gender order of the wider society. The intersection between the (gendered) individuals and the (gendered) institution in which they operate produces and reproduces that institution’s gender regime. Hence, the enquiry is not so much asking ‘have women judges made a difference?’ but rather is asking how should we understand women judges’ relationship with the law, a relationship that is shaped as much by the individual judge as by the institutional context in which they operate.

Scholars, legal practitioners and researchers interested in judicial reasoning, gender diversity and the legal profession, gender and politics will be interested in this book because it breaks new ground as a case study of a Court’s gender regime at a particular time.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

‘Men in skirts’ and other dilemmas and disappointments 1

chapter 2|25 pages

Jobs for the girls

Judicial appointments to the High Court of Australia and the politics of merit 1

chapter 3|28 pages

Sworn to be

Gender, difference and judicial swearing-in speeches

chapter 6|26 pages

Gendered harms in Monis v The Queen 1

chapter 7|20 pages

The art of looking back

The farewell ritual and the construction of judicial legacies 1

chapter 8|29 pages

The High Court today

Negotiating progress, privilege and hegemonic masculinity

chapter |10 pages

Conclusion

From non-persons to almost-parity: a masculinist gender order disrupted?