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MARK S. HURWITZ
University at Buffalo, SUNY
DREW NOBLE LANIER
University of Central Florida
Explaining
Judicial Diversity: The Differential
Ability of Women and Minorities to Attain Seats
on State Supreme and Appellate Courts
Representation in political institutions, including the
judiciary, is an important consideration for both political scientists
and citizens. What factors systematically influence diversity among judges?
In particular, does the method of selection affect the relative success
of political minorities in attaining a seat on the bench? The answers
to these questions have substantial normative and theoretical implications.
We examine judges on all state supreme and intermediate appellate courts
in 1985 and 1999 to assess the influence of various structural, political,
and demographic factors on judicial diversity. We demonstrate that the
ability of political minorities to attain a place in the judiciary is
not solely a function of any single factor. Instead, their success is
influenced by a multifaceted combination of factors contingent on time
and the level of the court, and these influences differ for women and
for minorities.
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