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Update on judicial diversity

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JUSTICE, report, women, BAME groups, senior roles, judiciary, Update, Working Party, 2017 reportNearly three years on “there has been only modest progress towards a more diverse senior judiciary.”

JUSTICE recently launched its latest working party report, ‘Increasing Judicial Diversity: An Update’.

This Update builds on JUSTICE’s report from 2017, ’Increasing Judicial Diversity, which explored the structural barriers faced by women, BAME communities, solicitors and those from lower socio-economic backgrounds in reaching the bench.

It assesses the progress that has been made since 2017, outlines areas that remain of critical concern and makes further recommendations for improving judicial diversity.

Analysing appointments data since 2017, the Working Party found that despite the clear case for increased judicial diversity, progress has remained slow.

Although there have been some welcome headline achievements – including two more women Justices having been appointed to the Supreme Court, the appointment of four more women solicitors to the High Court – Katie Gollop QC, Kate Grange QC, Sarah Morgan QC and Joanne Wicks QC – albeit alongside 20 men, and the appointment of Sir Rabinder Singh to the Court of Appeal – most appointments to the senior courts have continued much as before.

There has, the Update allows, been some improvement in the percentages of women appointed to the Circuit and High Court bench, however the overall numbers remain low meaning that progress is fragile.

And the data demonstrates that there has been negligible improvement in respect of other underrepresented groups.

The Working Party welcomed the adoption of some of its minor 2017 recommendations and ongoing efforts by the Judicial Appointments Commission – but the Update concludes that the current approach to judicial diversity is not working.

It urges large scale structural and cultural change to ensure we have a more diverse judiciary.

To this end, the recommendations include:

A system of proper accountability to ensure that the commitment to change is backed up by practical steps and, importantly, results. JUSTICE continues to call for the introduction of “targets with teeth” and the creation of a permanent “Senior Selections Committee” for appointments to the Court of Appeal, Heads of Division and the Supreme Court;

Establishing a meaningful internal judicial career path, where judges can begin their career in the more diverse Tribunals, or as District Judges. The Working Party found that the de facto career path into the senior judiciary remains via the fee-paid roles of Recorder and Deputy High Court Judge;

Cultural change led by the judicial leadership. Any substantial and sustained improvement in the diversity of our judiciary will require those in leadership positions to prioritise and commit to a cultural change, whereby judicial diversity is seen as fundamental to the quality of judging, rather than tangential;

Tackling affinity bias and ensuring merit is not used as an unconscious proxy for the characteristics, qualities and experience of the current cohort of judges. JUSTICE welcomes the Judicial Appointment Commission’s recent efforts to better understand and define merit, however we call for further efforts to be made to ensure that the appointments process tests for judicial potential and not prior advocacy experience.

Andrea Coomber, Director of JUSTICE, said: “Nearly three years since our last report there has been only modest progress towards a more diverse senior judiciary. Our senior judiciary continues to be dominated by white men from the independent Bar.

“We are continually assured that change is right around the corner and yet the homogeneity of appointments to the key feeder roles of Recorder and Deputy High Court judge give little reason for optimism.

“The judiciary play a critical role in our democracy and hold immense power in society. They can take away people’s liberty, their children, their rights and more.

“That such power is held by such an unrepresentative group of people – however meritorious – should be of concern to us all.”

To read the full report, click here.

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