Every current justice attended Harvard or Yale
WASHINGTON» It is not hard to see similarities between President Donald Trump’s last two Supreme Court nominees: They are white male conservatives who attended Ivy League law schools, clerked for retiring Justice Anthony M. Kennedy and went to the same exclusive private prep school.
The elite background does not end with them. If the Senate approves Trump’s nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, every justice sitting on the Supreme Court will have attended either Yale’s or Harvard’s law school. (Ruth Bader Ginsburg started at Harvard and transferred to another Ivy, Columbia.)
The shared elite backgrounds of Supreme Court justices, some experts say, is a disadvantage because scientific research shows diverse groups make better decisions.
Groups with vastly diverse members are smarter, more creative, make fewer errors and show increased problem-solving abilities, according to multiple studies across the fields of psychology, business, and organizational and behavioral science.
“The elitism on the Supreme Court is worrying,” said Benjamin Barton, a law professor at University of Tennessee at Knoxville. “From the age of 18, these people have all essentially done the same thing, followed the same path, run in the same cloistered circles. That’s not healthy.”
In 2012, Barton published a comprehensive study on the personal backgrounds of Supreme Court justices. He found that the modernera court presided over by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. was in many ways the most elitist, homogenous group assembled since the court’s inception.
While the current justices are far more diverse in gender and race than past decades, their educational and work backgrounds are almost uniform.
Almost all studied at the same Ivy League colleges and law schools. Beyond that, Barton’s study also found that “the Roberts Court Justices have spent more pre-appointment time in legal academia, appellate judging, and living in Washington, D.C. than any previous Supreme Court.”
This cookie-cutter mold is a relatively new phenomenon, experts say.
“One reason you see this happening is because the confirmations have gotten increasingly confrontational,” said Richard Davis, a political scientist at Brigham Young University. “It’s not like Harvard and Yale are the only good schools out there, but they become stand-ins for merit and a cover for ideology. You see presidents making the argument, ‘But look how qualified they are.’ The downside to that, unfortunately, is you don’t get a diversity of ideas or broader perspectives. You don’t get folks who practiced law in Montana or who studied at a school in Illinois.”
Recent studies show that homogeneity in teams can have huge impacts, especially in business. A 2015 McKinsey study of 366 public companies found that those with the highest ethnic and racial diversity in management were 35 percent more likely to have better-than-average financial returns. In a different study, when business researchers pitted the abilities of diverse against homogenous teams in financial markets, the diverse teams were 58 percent more likely to correctly price stocks and avoid overpricing and trader errors.
Last year in Harvard Business Review, two British researchers detailed experiments with cognitive diversity — differences in how individuals respond to new, uncertain and complex situations. Using the same test on teams ranging from a start-up biotechnology company to a group of IT consultants, they found correlations between cognitive diversity and better performance. The more diverse teams were better at coming up with different ways of approaching and solving problems.
In another study that sorted 200 participants into racially homogenous and diverse mock juries, researchers found the diverse juries were forced to cite more facts, deliberated longer and made fewer factual errors in their discussions than all-white mock juries.
“When team members are all the same, you start getting group think,” said David Rock, a co-founder of the Neuroleadership Institute who studies neuroscience and leadership. “By contrast, when you have diverse perspectives, people have to work harder to explain themselves and understand each other. They attack problems more robustly and from many more angles. It may feel like harder work and more uncomfortable, but it is in fact more creative and effective.”
While the Supreme Court has a long history of Harvard, Yale and other elite pedigrees, its bench has rarely been so dominated by them. Some early justices did not even have formal education. Other justices over the decades have included military veterans, former politicians and former criminal defense lawyers.
In recent years, however, the backgrounds of court nominees have increasingly narrowed to those who have jumped through a series of elite hoops. “It snuck up on us because of how rare these nominations are,” Barton said.