Lawyers at the 'information age water cooler': exposing sex discrimination and challenging law firm culture on the internet

Prior research has repeatedly documented the existence of gender inequality, discrimination, and harassment in the legal practice, an occupation that remains maledominated in terms of both numbers and organizational culture. Despite the availability of some legal remedies, women attorneys rarely sue...

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Main Author: Baumle, Amanda Kathleen
Other Authors: Gatson, Sarah N.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/4332
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-43322013-01-08T10:38:27ZLawyers at the 'information age water cooler': exposing sex discrimination and challenging law firm culture on the internetBaumle, Amanda KathleenLegal MobilizationGender InequalityPrior research has repeatedly documented the existence of gender inequality, discrimination, and harassment in the legal practice, an occupation that remains maledominated in terms of both numbers and organizational culture. Despite the availability of some legal remedies, women attorneys rarely sue their employers, and often do not challenge discriminatory behavior. In this dissertation, I explore this seemingly contradictory situation, where lawyers fail to employ the legal system on their own behalf, and I seek to determine whether the law can in fact be mobilized to challenge and perhaps change gender relations in the legal practice. Through ethnographic field research and content analysis of an Internet community, my research examines possible methods by which the law can serve as a tool to challenge gender discrimination. Further, I assess the manner in which the Internet community itself can serve as a vehicle for challenging gender inequality. In particular, I first explore the role formal litigation might play in promoting change for women attorneys, determining that attorneys in the Internet community are hesitant to employ litigation to challenge gender discrimination. This reluctance appears to result in large part from attorneys’ familiarity with the daunting task of establishing a discrimination case in the judicial system, as well as from a fear that the pursuit of litigation could inflict damage upon their legal careers. I then consider whether the law can serve as a useful tool to challenge inequality when legal discourse is employed within the Internet community to invoke a legal right to a discrimination-free workplace. I find that attorneys, despite their legal training, call upon both formal and informal notions of discrimination when confronted with circumstances colored with inequity. The Internet community itself provides a protected, semianonymous forum in which to engage in such discourse, thereby subverting many of the barriers that currently exist to challenging gender inequality in the legal practice. Further, the community serves as a resource to bring public attention to bear upon law firms, creating external pressures which encourage a reevaluation of both lay and legal understandings of prohibited gender discrimination.Texas A&M UniversityGatson, Sarah N.2006-10-30T23:29:56Z2006-10-30T23:29:56Z2005-082006-10-30T23:29:56ZBookThesisElectronic Dissertationtext626163 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/4332en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Legal Mobilization
Gender Inequality
spellingShingle Legal Mobilization
Gender Inequality
Baumle, Amanda Kathleen
Lawyers at the 'information age water cooler': exposing sex discrimination and challenging law firm culture on the internet
description Prior research has repeatedly documented the existence of gender inequality, discrimination, and harassment in the legal practice, an occupation that remains maledominated in terms of both numbers and organizational culture. Despite the availability of some legal remedies, women attorneys rarely sue their employers, and often do not challenge discriminatory behavior. In this dissertation, I explore this seemingly contradictory situation, where lawyers fail to employ the legal system on their own behalf, and I seek to determine whether the law can in fact be mobilized to challenge and perhaps change gender relations in the legal practice. Through ethnographic field research and content analysis of an Internet community, my research examines possible methods by which the law can serve as a tool to challenge gender discrimination. Further, I assess the manner in which the Internet community itself can serve as a vehicle for challenging gender inequality. In particular, I first explore the role formal litigation might play in promoting change for women attorneys, determining that attorneys in the Internet community are hesitant to employ litigation to challenge gender discrimination. This reluctance appears to result in large part from attorneys’ familiarity with the daunting task of establishing a discrimination case in the judicial system, as well as from a fear that the pursuit of litigation could inflict damage upon their legal careers. I then consider whether the law can serve as a useful tool to challenge inequality when legal discourse is employed within the Internet community to invoke a legal right to a discrimination-free workplace. I find that attorneys, despite their legal training, call upon both formal and informal notions of discrimination when confronted with circumstances colored with inequity. The Internet community itself provides a protected, semianonymous forum in which to engage in such discourse, thereby subverting many of the barriers that currently exist to challenging gender inequality in the legal practice. Further, the community serves as a resource to bring public attention to bear upon law firms, creating external pressures which encourage a reevaluation of both lay and legal understandings of prohibited gender discrimination.
author2 Gatson, Sarah N.
author_facet Gatson, Sarah N.
Baumle, Amanda Kathleen
author Baumle, Amanda Kathleen
author_sort Baumle, Amanda Kathleen
title Lawyers at the 'information age water cooler': exposing sex discrimination and challenging law firm culture on the internet
title_short Lawyers at the 'information age water cooler': exposing sex discrimination and challenging law firm culture on the internet
title_full Lawyers at the 'information age water cooler': exposing sex discrimination and challenging law firm culture on the internet
title_fullStr Lawyers at the 'information age water cooler': exposing sex discrimination and challenging law firm culture on the internet
title_full_unstemmed Lawyers at the 'information age water cooler': exposing sex discrimination and challenging law firm culture on the internet
title_sort lawyers at the 'information age water cooler': exposing sex discrimination and challenging law firm culture on the internet
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/4332
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