糖心Vlog

A law unto themselves?

Published on
October 23, 1998
Last updated
May 22, 2015

Professor Jo Shaw, department of law, University of Leeds

"Over the years legal academia has become increasingly feminised. When I first joined the Society of Public Teachers of Law in the mid-1980s I was invited to bring my 'wife' to the annual conference. I found the invitation shocking and told them so. Certainly legal academia has become - at least outwardly - a place more tolerant of different lifestyles, and even of orientations. Since I began work, a number of women have moved into senior positions in the universities and many have joined the junior ranks. The upper ranks remain male-dominated, nonetheless. The acid test is that I have never been in a position to use a woman as a referee.

Legal academia has offered an environment in which gay men and lesbians have felt able to come out. Sadly, there remain few ethnic minority staff in law schools.

While I have encountered little hostility to my career progress, I have occasionally detected uneasiness, mainly on the part of male colleagues."

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