Author:
Crandall Erin,Lawlor Andrea
Abstract
AbstractThe influence of party connection on the selection of judges has long been an issue in Canada This article considers whether such connections adversely affect the appointment of women judges to federally appointed courts. The answer appears to be yes. Using political donations as a proxy for party connection, the data analyzed here suggest that as the number of appointees with connections to the government rises, the number of women appointees falls. However, for appointments to provincial courts by the government of Ontario, the prevalence of political connections among judicial appointees is less prominent, suggesting that different systems of judicial appointment may help to lessen these effects.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
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1. The Judiciary: Representation in Law and Justice Public Policy;The Palgrave Handbook of Gender, Sexuality, and Canadian Politics;2020