Article

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

Elliott Ash, Daniel L. Chen, and Arianna Ornaghi

Abstract

Do gender attitudes influence interactions with female judges in U.S. Circuit Courts? In this paper, we propose a judge-specific measure of gender attitudes based on use of gender-stereotyped 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 higher-slant judges vote more conservatively in gender-related cases. Higher-slant judges interact differently with female colleagues: they 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.

Keywords

Gender attitudes; judiciary; stereotypes; NLP;

JEL codes

  • J16: Economics of Gender • Non-labor Discrimination
  • D91: Intertemporal Household Choice • Life Cycle Models and Saving
  • K41: Litigation Process

Reference

Elliott Ash, Daniel L. Chen, and Arianna Ornaghi, Gender Attitudes in the Judiciary: Evidence from U.S. Circuit Courts, American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, vol. 16, n. 1, January 2024, pp. 314–350.

See also

Published in

American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, vol. 16, n. 1, January 2024, pp. 314–350