Hannah Brenner Johnson (Author)
Hannah Brenner Johnson is Vice Dean for Academic and Student
Affairs and Associate Professor of Law at California Western School
of Law in San Diego.
Renee Knake Jefferson (Author)
Renee Knake Jefferson is Professor of Law and the Doherty
Chair in Legal Ethics at the University of Houston and author of
Shortlisted: Women in the Shadows of the Supreme Court.
Melissa Murray (Foreword by)
Melissa Murray is Frederick I. and Grace Stokes Professor of
Law at New York University School of Law and MSNBC Commentator.
Written with lawyerly precision and clarity of thought, Shortlisted
offers a comprehensive yet succinct look at the history of women in
the Supreme Court with implications for women and minorities
everywhere. … Straddling many disciplines, this book is
well-researched, well-organized and well-argued. I rule in its
favor.
*The Observer*
[Shortlisted] tells the political and personal sagas of women
publicly considered for appointment to the Supreme Court but never
actually nominated by a president... With fresh research, the
authors effectively humanize the women who never received the
nominations they deserved.
*Kirkus Reviews*
Accessible and engagingly written, Shortlisted makes a significant
contribution to understanding how justices are nominated and the
hurdles women face when they strive to reach the highest levels of
the legal profession ... The book presents a polished narrative. It
is concise and well researched.
*Law.com*
Piecing together their personal papers and archives, as well as
relevant news coverage, Johnson and Jefferson introduce readers to
the ambitious women who built influential legal careers and
advanced a female presence in the federal courts, especially the
Supreme Court...The authors compellingly argue that representation
of diverse women in leadership positions is in everybody’s best
interest. An excellent contribution...and essential for anyone who
values diversity.
*Library Journal*
[F]ascinating and painstakingly researched...Shortlisted is a
wake-up call about the persistence of gender inequality. This book
represents an important step beyond shortlisting and tokenism
toward true selection.
*Texas Bar Journal*
Shortlisted is a fascinating read for observers of the Supreme
Court, and anyone concerned about diversity and inclusion in the
judiciary, our profession, and society. The stories of the
remarkable, but mostly unknown, women shortlisted for our highest
court fill an important historical gap.
*NAELA Journal Online*
This eloquently written and captivating story of the not
insignificant number of women once considered to fill vacancies
dating back to the 1930s on the U.S. Supreme Court aims to achieve
not only the filling of the major gap in history of those women who
‘could have been’, but also offers strategies for changing the
future course of “her-story” by acknowledging these women’s
contributions in the struggle for gender equality ... While many
scholarly works leave us yearning for more, Shortlisted follows
through on its promise to provide practical advice for mechanisms
of change and hope for the future.
*Law and Politics Book Review*
Legal scholarship that creates new avenues of inquiry is inherently
appealing, but when it also reveals obscured narratives of power in
American society, you have the makings of a truly important
contribution. Shortlisted is all that and an engaging read
besides.
*Legal Profession Jotwell*
T]imely and provocative...[A] fascinating examination of the
‘herstories’ of the ‘shortlisted sisters’.
*Law and Society*
Shortlisted is remarkable not only for what it tells us about the
women who made the presidential shortlists of potential Supreme
Court nominees but for what it tells us about how our nation then
and now continues to struggle with understanding equality. May the
stories of these extraordinary women and the demonstrated
leadership of the women who have made it to the pinnacle of the
legal profession through service on our highest court drive us each
to realize the great potential of our country that still awaits
us.
*Judy Perry Martinez, American Bar Association President*
Stunningly original in its focus and its careful research,
Shortlisted is beautifully written and an important addition to the
literature about the Supreme Court, the process of nominating
justices, and the role of gender in American law.
*Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean and Jesse H. Choper Distinguished
Professor of Law, University of California, Berkeley School of
Law*
This is a major contribution to the story of women lawyers. The
authors study women whose trajectories were never before
systematically examined - women shortlisted for the Supreme Court.
What they describe is all the more remarkable because it involves
remarkable women – portraying women in gendered and unfavorable
ways; emphasizing diversity by putting women on shortlists, but not
selecting them; saving a seat for certain groups but not for women.
It sounds so familiar in other contexts, but it is shocking in this
one. The message is clear and troubling: If women who are the elite
of the profession can be treated shabbily, we have much more to
do.
*Hon. Nancy Gertner, U.S.D.Ct. Judge (Ret.)*
Masterfully tells the story of the women who were considered for
nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court. It is a must read.
*Carla Pratt, Dean of Washburn University School of Law and former
Associate Justice for the Supreme Court of the Standing Rock Sioux
Tribe, North Dakota*
This fascinating book reconstructs a chapter of women's history
that has been hiding in plain sight: the numerous qualified women
whose names were floated for the Supreme Court but who never got
there. Just as they were overlooked, so have their individual
stories been—until now.
*Linda Greenhouse, New York Times contributing columnist*
A well written, logically organized, and thoroughly researched
exploration ... a significant contribution to the sociolegal
literature on the judicial selection process.
*Law and Society Review*
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