Search
This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian News

Delay update ... "Extraordinary and excessive" delay - by the litigants ... Contest on costs ... Getting to grips with Qld industrial law takes time ... What is a "worker"? ... What is an "injury"? ... Justice Jenni frigging around ... Slow grind for earnest Circuiteer ... From judges' associate Ginger Snatch ... Read more >>

 

Politics Media Law Society


A biopsy on bias ... Darryl Rangiah and Oscar Wilde … A unity ticket … White flags at Ultimo … The Hyphen … BBC also on the ropes … Cease – FIRE … Why is Murdoch’s bias always wrong about everything? ... Read on >> 

Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

From the cutting room floor...Handsy Heydon goes to Perth ... Celebrity tour ... Conferenceville ... Dicey's job application speech from 2002 ... Other High Court judges mocked as "vegetables" ... Mason CJ ridiculed ... Speech bowdlerised for public consumption ... Courage of conviction MIA ... From our National Affairs Correspondent ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


Walter Sofronoff v ACT Integrity Commission kicks off on Monday @ 10.15 am before Justice Abraham ... Judicial review of corruption finding ... More >> 

Justinian's Bloggers

London Calling ... Sizzling in the Old Dart ... Story of the complaining law graduate ... Tattle Life brought to book ... Beckham family feud over royal gong ... Floyd Alexander-Hunt's postcard ... Read more >> 

"What you are not being told by the media anywhere is that the death toll likely would not have been as high if it wasn't for DEI."

Charlie Kirk, American conservative and conspiracy theorist on the Texas floods ... The Charlie Kirk Show, July 9, 2025  Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

Zeitgeist litigation ... Matt Collins KC on live-streaming of high-profile trials ... Social media nightmare ... Abuse of barristers ... Chilling emails ... Trials as a form of public entertainment ... Courts sleepwalking into a dangerous zone ... Framework needed to balance competing interests ... Paper delivered to Australian Lawyers Alliance Conference ... Read more >> 


Justinian's archive

Being chased by a dog called Rhetoric ... Justice Virginia Bell on rhetorical devices and barristering ... It seems to be a male thing ... Distractions from the truth ... Tulkinghorn asks, where would the bar be without bad rhetoric? ... September 14, 2012 ... Read more >> 


 

 

« Hyperemisis gravidarum strikes a cruel blow | Main | Obama's republic »
Wednesday
Dec052012

The bar's up

NSW bar more gender equal than its Yarraside counterpart ... Why is that so, when there are so many lovely sentiments about equality? ... VicBar actions on parental leave at odds with stated policy ... Gender correspondent Ginger Snatch reports 

Martha: we need you

LOTS of noble utterances have been issued about gender equality for people of the barristerial persuasion. 

VicBar president Fiona McLeod is the latest out of the blocks, with a pledge to increase the number of women applying for silk. 

The latest crop of newly minted silks from Yarraside saw only three women out of a batch of 20 make the cut.  

Of the 45 seeking election to the Vic bar council at the most recent poll, only six were women. 

Out of a council of 21, three women were elected.  

At the Sydney bar 'n' grill things are a bit better on the female representation front. 

In the last crop of silks, of the 26 appointed, 12 were women.  

In NSW, at the recent bar council elections there were 70 candidates, of which 17 were women. 

Nine women were elected to the council of 21. 

So, in theory, female leadership roles are stronger at the sensitive, gender-aware NSW bar than in Victoria, which has laboured long under the yoke of a dominant clique of hoary Irish males with hairy ears and nostrils. 

It must have struck VicBar prez McLeod as odd, hence her call about fostering more women silks.  

Just how this is done invariably is couched in vague terms. McLeod said: 

"I believe we need to do more ... which will no doubt involve working with solicitors and others." 

*   *   *

THE imbalance comes from structural and cultural conditions. 

The VicBar council has entrenched the dominance of older silks (15-years plus), which of itself creates an inherent bias against women because they are less likely in present circumstances to last more than 15 years. 

NSW did away with the requirement to vote for a minimum number of senior counsel, with the result that ageing silks are no longer in the majority at the wig 'n' gown club's inner sanctum. 

If you examine VicBar's annual report you'll discover there is a consolidated surplus for 2012 of $6.5 million, with $11 million in cash reserves and $87 million in net assets.   

Not bad ... in fact, it looks to be in better financial shape than the more swollen NSW bar, which has current net assets of $7.4 million, cash of $6.7 million and a net surplus of $241,165. 

See: NSW bar's 2012 annual report.  

So, you'd imagine that the Victorians would be able to afford a generous parental leave policy.  

Instead, the bar council tightened its chambers' rental subsidy. 

The scheme had been enthusiastically embraced, particularly by women seeking time-off for children, but wanting to come back to the bar. 

A subsidy cap was introduced in March last year and currently stands at $1,300 a month. This might seem generous, but not when you consider a windowless box in ODC will set you back $800 a month and anything half-decent (even if shared) is $3,000 a month. 

Women barristers might agitate to unlock the bar council's wealth so that it can be sent the way of those who need to take time off, but don't want to return to ply their trade from a hovel. 

The bar council doesn't need to work "with solicitors and others" to stretch out a hand to  female members. 

*   *   *

ONLY this week (Monday, Dec. 3) the Victorian Equal Opportunity and Human Rights Commission released its findings on "Women in the Law".  

It surveyed the experiences of female lawyers in Victoria, in conjunction with the Law Institute. 

For some reason the survey did not extend to the bar, although Debbie Mortimer SC was a member of the "critical friends group". 

The findings were hardly surprising: 

"Women are exiting the legal profession because of systemic discrimination and cultural and structural factors." 

We told you it was cultural and structural. 

The various bars all have nice sounding equality and diversity policies. 

The VicBar policy aims to ...  

"foster a strategy of inclusion and equality ..." 

Yet, it squirrels its money and downgrades its parental leave arrangements - at odds with what it says it is doing. 

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Editor Permission Required
You must have editing permission for this entry in order to post comments.