' I just don’t understand how Clarence and Ginni Thomas treat every component of the federal judiciary as though it’s like a brunch at their house and they’re just giving out cupcakes. Like, “Here, have a Diet Coke!” But instead it’s like, “Here, have a clerkship with a feeder judge, and another feeder judge, and then a clerkship with me!” '

#USSupremeCourt #SCOTUS #clerkships #ClarenceThomas #fascism

https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2024/04/clarence-thomas-hires-crystal-clanton-supreme-court-clerk-luck.html

Clarence Thomas Hires the Luckiest Clerk in Supreme Court History

She’ll be on a fast track to a judgeship within the next 10 years.

Slate
New York Disbars Infamous Copyright Troll

For whom the bell tolls; it tolls for copyright trolls.

Above the Law
New York Disbars Infamous Copyright Troll

For whom the bell tolls; it tolls for copyright trolls.

Above the Law

Listen to the new episode of More Just: Tracking the Diversity of Federal Judicial Clerks

For recent law school graduates, clerking for a federal judge can be a key career stepping stone, and the hiring process is both highly opaque and famously nerve-wracking. Even as law school cohorts have become more diverse, the clerkship ranks have remained heavily skewed toward white men, particularly from a handful of top-ranked law schools.

Leaders from Berkeley Law’s Berkeley Judicial Institute wanted to know why. So they asked 50 federal judges how and why they hire particular clerks in the first qualitative study of the issue. These conversations yielded a number of insights for law students, law schools, and other judges, from how much an aspiring clerk’s cover letter matters to the fact that “diversity” doesn’t mean the same thing to every judge.

https://www.law.berkeley.edu/podcast-episode/tracking-the-diversity-of-federal-judicial-clerks/

#LawFedi #LawSchool #LawProfs #Judiciary #Clerkships #Diversity

Tracking the Diversity of Federal Judicial Clerks

Dean Erwin Chemerinsky discusses diversity and the federal clerkship hiring process with Judge Jeremy Fogel, Justice Goodwin Liu, and Professor Mary Hoopes.

Berkeley Law