I Can’t See You; Can You Hear Me? Gender Norms and Context During In-Person and Teleconference U.S. Supreme Court Oral Arguments

IF 3.1 2区 社会学 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE Politics & Gender Pub Date : 2023-11-16 DOI:10.1017/s1743923x23000594
Shane A. Gleason
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Abstract

Female attorneys at the U.S. Supreme Court are less successful than male attorneys under some conditions because of gender norms, implicit expectations about how men and women should act. While previous work has found that women are more successful when they use more emotional language at oral arguments, gender norms are context sensitive. The COVID-19 pandemic prompted perhaps the most radical contextual shift in Supreme Court history: freewheeling in-person arguments were replaced with turn-based teleconference arguments. This change altered judicial decision-making and, I argue, justices’ assessments of attorneys’ gender performance. Using quantitative textual analysis of oral arguments, I demonstrate that justices implicitly evaluate gender performance with different metrics in each modality. Gender-normative levels of emotional language predict success in both formats. Function words, however, only predict success in teleconference arguments. Given gender’s salience at the Supreme Court and in broader society, my findings prompt questions about the extent to which women can substantively impact case law.
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我看不见你;你能听到我吗?美国最高法院当面和电话会议口头辩论中的性别规范和语境
在某些情况下,美国最高法院的女律师不如男律师成功,这是由于性别规范,即对男性和女性应该如何行事的隐性期望。虽然之前的研究发现,女性在口头辩论中使用更情绪化的语言会更成功,但性别规范是对语境敏感的。2019冠状病毒病大流行可能引发了最高法院历史上最激进的背景转变:随心所欲的面对面辩论被基于回合的电话会议辩论所取代。我认为,这一变化改变了司法决策,也改变了法官对律师性别表现的评估。通过对口头辩论的定量文本分析,我证明了法官在每种模式下用不同的衡量标准隐性地评估性别表现。情感语言的性别规范水平预示着两种形式的成功。然而,虚词只能预测电话会议辩论的成功。考虑到性别在最高法院和更广泛的社会中的突出地位,我的发现引发了一个问题,即女性能在多大程度上实质性地影响判例法。
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来源期刊
Politics & Gender
Politics & Gender Multiple-
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
5.90%
发文量
40
期刊介绍: Politics & Gender is an agenda-setting journal that publishes the highest quality scholarship on gender and politics and on women and politics. It aims to represent the full range of questions, issues, and approaches on gender and women across the major subfields of political science, including comparative politics, international relations, political theory, and U.S. politics. The Editor welcomes studies that address fundamental questions in politics and political science from the perspective of gender difference, as well as those that interrogate and challenge standard analytical categories and conventional methodologies.Members of the Women and Politics Research Section of the American Political Science Association receive the journal as a benefit of membership.
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