Book contents
- Justice for Everyone
- Justice for Everyone
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- Table of International Treaties and Conventions
- Brenda Hale Bibliography
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Personal Reflections
- Part III Academic
- Part IV Law Commissioner
- Part V Judge
- Judicial Leadership
- Family Law and Children’s Rights
- Human Rights and the State
- 23 Orthodox Principles and Unconventional Outcomes in Public Law
- 24 Lady Hale
- 25 Baroness Hale
- 26 ‘A Homemaker as Well as a Judge’
- 27 Gender Equality and Article 14 ECHR
- Private Law and the Individual
- Part VI Creative Encounters
- Index
26 - ‘A Homemaker as Well as a Judge’
Lady Hale and Judicial Homemaking/Unmaking/Remaking
from Human Rights and the State
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2022
- Justice for Everyone
- Justice for Everyone
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- Table of International Treaties and Conventions
- Brenda Hale Bibliography
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Personal Reflections
- Part III Academic
- Part IV Law Commissioner
- Part V Judge
- Judicial Leadership
- Family Law and Children’s Rights
- Human Rights and the State
- 23 Orthodox Principles and Unconventional Outcomes in Public Law
- 24 Lady Hale
- 25 Baroness Hale
- 26 ‘A Homemaker as Well as a Judge’
- 27 Gender Equality and Article 14 ECHR
- Private Law and the Individual
- Part VI Creative Encounters
- Index
Summary
Biographies of Lady Hale refer routinely to her as a ‘homemaker as well as a judge’. Although her career is not exactly short of alternative inspiration for the byline writer or public lecture compere, the phrase is almost ubiquitous. When introducing Lady Hale’s recent Chatham House lecture on ‘Legal Determinants of Health’, Professor Lawrence Gostin emphasised the ‘homemaker’ motif in his introduction as he explained – while gesturing at Lady Hale – it ‘just so expresses who you are’ and the ‘humility that you have’. As Auchmuty and Rackley demonstrate, biographies of legal women so often ‘insert men into the picture’ by placing their successes in a heterosexual context. Describing Lady Hale as a ‘homemaker’, they argue, follows this same pattern by emphasising her ‘traditional’ success in finding a husband and bearing children, rather than her unprecedented career. The source is, however – as Auchmuty and Rackley recognise – Lady Hale herself. The full excerpt in her self-penned biography on the Supreme Court website reads: ‘A homemaker as well as a judge, she thoroughly enjoyed helping the artists and architects create a new home for the Supreme Court.’
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- Chapter
- Information
- Justice for EveryoneThe Jurisprudence and Legal Lives of Brenda Hale, pp. 290 - 301Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022