The Daily Telegraph

Women should make up half of the judiciary, says top judge

- By Sophie Barnes

BRITAIN’S most senior judge has called for at least half of the judiciary to be made up of women.

Speaking on Thursday to mark 100 years since women’s entry into the legal profession, Baroness Brenda Hale, president of the Supreme Court and the first woman in the role, said that as women make up half the population, “we should be half of judges at least”.

Just 29 per cent of court judges are women, according to the latest Ministry of Justice figures from last year. In the Supreme Court, the UK’S highest court, just three out of 12 justices are female and in tribunal courts 46 per cent of judges are female.

Lady Hale has previously called for more diversity in the judiciary so that the public feel those on the bench are “our judges” rather than “beings from another planet”.

Speaking alongside her at the event organised by the UK Associatio­n of Women Judges was Baroness Elizabeth Butler-sloss, the first female judge in the court of appeal, and Teresa Doherty, former presiding judge of the special court of Sierra Leone.

Lady Butler-sloss said she is not a feminist. “I didn’t really think about gender very much,’’ she said. “The only time I thought about it was when I was called to the district bench.”

She was told there were no female judges at the time and that they wanted a woman who was married with children.

In contrast, Lady Hale said she had “never hesitated” to call herself a feminist

“It should never be a term of abuse or embarrassm­ent.” she added.

“We should be equal to men and have equal rights. Everybody in this room should be a feminist. I find it quite astonishin­g that it took until 2004 to put a woman in the House of Lords. That’s because they weren’t looking hard enough. Now they realise things have to change and have changed considerab­ly.”

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