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6 - Women Judges, “Maiden Speeches,” and the High Court of Australia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Beverley Baines
Affiliation:
Queen's University, Ontario
Daphne Barak-Erez
Affiliation:
Tel-Aviv University
Tsvi Kahana
Affiliation:
Queen's University, Ontario
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Summary

[T]he way one tells one's story is a way of positioning one's gender identity vis-à-vis an audience taking part in the process…as an ongoing process of articulating sameness and difference.

On February 3, 2009, a historic event occurred in the Australian legal community. Of the seven judges of the High Court of Australia, three are now women: Justices Susan Crennan, Susan Kiefel, and Virginia Bell. Never before has Australia's constitutional and ultimate court of appeal achieved near equality in the gender composition of its bench. In 1987, when Mary Gaudron was appointed as the first woman to the court, this achievement may have seemed a far-off dream.

Since the Australian High Court was established in 1903, ceremonies have been held to mark the swearing-in of a new Justice. This chapter utilizes the speeches made at the swearing-in ceremonies of Gaudron, Crennan, Kiefel, and Bell as a prism to explore the representation of women judges in the Australian legal community, and in particular, the Australian High Court.

These ceremonies are a rich resource by virtue of the two kinds of speeches made on these occasions. First, leaders of the Australian legal community make speeches welcoming the new High Court judge to the bench. In a legal system where federal judges are chosen behind closed doors, the welcome speeches have performed a key role in introducing the new judges to the public, and attesting to their skills as lawyer and judge. Importantly, the litany of a new judge’s accomplishments on these occasions contextualizes the concept of “merit” in aHigh Court appointment. Furthermore, the speech by the Commonwealth Attorney-General has provided a measure of public justification of his decision to appoint a particular judge. This chapter explores how the welcome speakers have grappled with the novelty of the feminine in the stories about the four female High Court judges. I argue that gender too often dominated this narrative, to a discriminatory and feminizing effect. In this regard, however, Bell’s ceremony may signal a new direction in the Australian legal community’s attitude toward female judges.

Type
Chapter
Information
Feminist Constitutionalism
Global Perspectives
, pp. 113 - 131
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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References

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