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  1. Women Law Professors – Negotiating and Transcending Gender Identities at Work.Celia Wells - 2002 - Feminist Legal Studies 10 (1):1-38.
    This paper reports a research project on womenlaw professors in the U.K. Despite theirsimilar social and educational backgrounds,successful women legal academics disclosemarked differences in their perceptions of theinfluence of gender on their work identities.Many emphasise the caring and pastoral rolesthey adopt, or are expected to adopt.Organisational cultures also emerge as asignificant factor in determining the genderexperiences of women law professors. The fewwith experience as head of school downplay thesignificance of gender while simultaneouslyacknowledging the influence of genderconstructions and expectations.
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  • “Change is Pain”: Ethical Legal Discourse and Cultural Competence.Rose Voyvodic - 2005 - Legal Ethics 8 (1):55-69.
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  • John Rambo v Atticus Finch: Gender, Diversity and the Civility Movement.Amy Salyzyn - 2013 - Legal Ethics 16 (1):97-118.
    The need for increased civility has been a recurring theme in conversations about lawyer professionalism in the United States and Canada over the last several decades. In addition to having many advocates, however, the civility movement has also been subject to criticism. In large part, the critiques made to date have focused on the problems or risks created when civility rules or guidelines are enforced against lawyers. This article takes a different focus to provide a complementary, yet distinct critique. The (...)
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