By Law.com Editors | December 14, 2017
Tune in today! Join National Law Journal Supreme Court correspondent Tony Mauro and former Acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal for a conference call at 3 ET to discuss new demographic research on Supreme Court law clerks. The call is free. Register now and be part of the conversation.
National Law Journal | Editor's Letter
By Tony Mauro | Vanessa Blum | December 11, 2017
One of the recurring story lines of the current U.S. Supreme Court is the increasing influence and prestige of the law clerks the justices hire to help…
By Tony Mauro | December 11, 2017
Since 2005, the pool of U.S. Supreme Court law clerks has been less diverse than law school graduates or law firm associates. Explore hiring by the current justices using this interactive.
National Law Journal | Exclusive
By Tony Mauro | December 11, 2017
According to a National Law Journal study, the U.S. Supreme Court's clerk ranks are less diverse than law school graduates or law firm associates—and the justices aren't doing much to change that.
National Law Journal | Infographic
By Tony Mauro | December 11, 2017
While Supreme Court justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer have hired roughly equal numbers of men and women as law clerks since 2005, other chambers continue to be male-dominated. Explore hiring by the current justices using this interactive feature.
National Law Journal | Exclusive
By Tony Mauro | December 11, 2017
Research conducted by The National Law Journal found 85 percent of all law clerks since 2005 have been white and twice as many men as women gain entry.
By Jenna Greene | November 29, 2017
Bittersweet. That's how Hogan Lovells partner Neal Katyal describes breaking Thurgood Marshall's record, set in 1967, as the minority lawyer with the most oral arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Vivia Chen | November 10, 2017
I think it's perfectly logical for Big Law types to get into politics: They've got the skills, the smarts and a high tolerance for boring details that should come in handy in the governing process.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Vivia Chen | November 2, 2017
How did these men (no women, of course) beat the odds? And what advice do they have for young lawyers of color?
By Marcia Coyle | October 27, 2017
The role of general counsel has evolved to the point now where they have "the access, influence, power and resources" to advance social justice causes, Kim Rivera, chief legal officer and general counsel of HP Inc., said Friday at a Harvard Law School bicentennial event. But that wasn't always the case.
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