Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-15T19:26:22.031Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Gender Pay Gap and High-Achieving Women in the Legal Profession

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2022

Milan Markovic
Affiliation:
Professor and Presidential Impact Fellow, Texas A&M University School of Law, Fort Worth, United States Email: mmarkovic@law.tamu.edu
Gabriele Plickert
Affiliation:
Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, California State Polytechnic University-Pomona, Pomona, United States
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Although women have made significant strides in the legal profession, female attorneys continue to earn far less than male attorneys. Relying on survey data from a large sample of full-time attorneys in Texas, we find a gender pay gap of thirty-five thousand dollars at the median that cannot be explained by differences in human capital or occupational segregation. We also provide evidence that the legal market especially disadvantages women who excel in law school. Whereas high academic achievement boosts male lawyers’ incomes substantially, it does not have the same effect on female lawyers’ incomes. High-achieving female lawyers earn less than high-achieving male lawyers across practice settings and earn less than their lower-achieving male counterparts in private practice. We conclude that discrimination in the legal profession operates partly by devaluing female attorneys’ human capital, such that sterling academic credentials and other traits that are valued in men are far less valued in women.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Bar Foundation

INTRODUCTION

For much of American history, women could not practice law (Rhode Reference Rhode2013, 130). As jurisdictions removed legal prohibitions and cultural norms shifted, an influx of women began to enter the legal profession in the 1970s and transformed legal practice (Epstein Reference Epstein1993, 291). Women now constitute over half of all law students and 37 percent of practicing lawyers (Merritt and McEntee Reference Deborah Jones and Mcentee2019).Footnote 1 Once confined to a few “feminized fields … at the bottom of the professional hierarchy” (Menkel-Meadow Reference Menkel-Meadow1986), women practice in every legal market sector and hold some of the most powerful positions in the profession (Kay and Gorman Reference Kay and Gorman2008).

Despite this progress, true equality has proven elusive. Empirical research documents a metaphorical glass ceiling that inhibits female lawyers’ careers (Kay and Hagan Reference Kay and Hagan1995; Reichman and Sterling Reference Reichman and Sterling2004). Female lawyers are held to higher standards than their male counterparts, are continually called upon to prove their professional commitment, and disproportionately depart law firms without ascending to prestigious and lucrative partner positions (Kanter Reference Kanter1977; Hull and Nelson Reference Hull and Nelson2000; Wald Reference Wald2009). Overt forms of discrimination are also common. A quarter of female attorneys report that colleagues have treated them unfairly because of their gender (Collins, Dumas, and Moyer Reference Collins, Dumas and Moyer2017), and 57 percent have been sexually harassed.Footnote 2

Perhaps no issue has commanded as much attention as the legal profession’s gender pay gap.Footnote 3 The gender pay gap is not unique to law but appears to be of greater magnitude in law than in other professional fields such as engineering and business (Noonan, Corcoran, and Courant Reference Noonan, Corcoran and Courant2005; Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009). Although some scholars have speculated that the gender pay gap would dissipate once women were fully integrated into the legal profession (Donovan Reference Donovan1990; Chiu and Leicht Reference Chiu and Leicht1999; Wald Reference Wald2009), most studies point to its persistence (Noonan, Corcoran, and Courant Reference Noonan, Corcoran and Courant2005; Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009).

Scholars have offered several theories to explain the legal profession’s gender pay gap. One traditional account focuses on female lawyers’ purported tendencies to invest less in their human capital (Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009; Hagan Reference Hagan1990; Robson and Wallace Reference Robson and Wallace2001). Another focuses on labor market segmentation or segregation - female lawyers’ sorting into less remunerative fields such as public interest or government work.Footnote 4 Scholars have also explored the role of child-rearing and other familial factors (Hagan and Kay Reference Hagan and Kay1995; Noonan, Corcoran, and Courant Reference Noonan, Corcoran and Courant2005). Modern accounts concentrate on discriminatory organizational structures that favor men and devalue women (Kay and Gorman Reference Kay and Gorman2008; Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009; Sterling and Reichman Reference Sterling and Reichman2016).

Relying on survey data from over nine thousand full-time Texas attorneys, we provide evidence of a large gender pay gap of thirty-five thousand dollars at the median and sixty-four thousand dollars at the mean. We also show that neither differences in human capital nor labor market segregation explain the earnings gap. Despite women’s progress in the legal profession, male lawyers earn far more than similarly situated female lawyers across legal practice settings and roles. This research is also the first of its kind to examine whether the legal market especially disadvantages the most qualified female lawyers. Although scholars have consistently shown that academic performance is highly correlated with income (Sander and Bambauer Reference Sander and Bambauer2012), we find that female lawyers with the strongest performance in law school do not see the gains of male lawyers with similar records and, in fact, earn no more than male lawyers with the weakest academic records. In private practice, high-achieving female lawyers earn substantially less than both their high-achieving and lower-achieving male counterparts. Discriminatory pay structures are so entrenched that superior qualifications do not ensure pay parity. Thus, women face a double bind in the legal profession: poor academic performance will disqualify them from the most lucrative positions, whereas the legal market will not fully reward superior performance. These findings have significant implications for women’s advancement in the legal profession and gender equity more generally.

In the first section of this article, we discuss human capital theory and labor market segregation and their applications to the legal profession’s gender pay gap. We also theorize that the gender gap partly may be caused by the legal market’s devaluation of female lawyers’ academic performance, a particularly important marker for success in the legal profession. In the second section, we describe the parameters of our study and our data collection methods. In the third section, we use Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition to demonstrate that differences in human capital assets and occupational segregation explain only a small percentage of the legal profession’s gender pay gap (Blinder Reference Blinder1973; Oaxaca Reference Oaxaca1973). In addition, we compare the earnings of high-achieving female lawyers to those of other groups using ordinary least squares (OLS) regression. We find that high-achieving female lawyers earn less than high-achieving male lawyers and no more than lower-achieving male lawyers. In private practice, they earn far less than both groups, and the pay gap is especially pronounced among law firm equity partners. In the fourth section, we analyze the implications of these results and situate them in the larger glass ceiling literature. The article concludes by noting relevant limitations and possible avenues for future research.

Background

Human Capital and the Legal Profession’s Gender Pay Gap

Economists have long stressed that education, job training, and other such expenditures should be considered as investments in human capital (Schultz Reference Schultz1961; Becker Reference Becker1964). Scholars working in the human capital tradition view disparities in earnings as a function of differential human capital investments (Becker Reference Becker1985; Goldin and Polachek Reference Goldin and Polachek1987). With respect to the gender pay gap, male workers purportedly command higher wages than female workers because they invest more in their careers and therefore accumulate more experience and expertise that is rewarded in the market (Manning and Swaffield Reference Manning and Swaffield2008).

Human capital theorists do not exclude the possibility of gender discrimination but maintain that, even in the absence of discrimination, women will tend to invest less in their human capital. In particular, it is more efficient and productive for married households to agree to a division of labor whereby one spouse (generally, the female) specializes in the home and the other (generally, the male) specializes in the workforce (Becker Reference Becker1985). As Gary Becker (Reference Becker1985, 41) writes,

men and women have intrinsically different comparative advantages not only in the production of children, but also in their contribution to childcare and possibly to other activities…. Such intrinsic differences in productivity would determine the direction of the sexual division of labor by tasks and hence sexual differences in the accumulation of specific human capital that reinforce the intrinsic differences.

When women do work outside the home, they purportedly gravitate to less demanding job settings that are more compatible with childrearing and other familial responsibilities (Polachek Reference Polachek, Cynthia, Emily and Curtis1979; Dau-Schmidt and Mukhopadhaya Reference Dau-Schmidt and Mukhopadhaya1999).

A substantial literature has criticized human capital theory’s understanding of the gender pay gap (England et al. Reference England, Farkas, Stanek Kilbourne and Dou1988; Anker Reference Anker1997). Whereas human capital theorists often portray women’s employment in less remunerative fields as being driven by preferences for less demanding careers and an efficient division of labor, sociologists have emphasized that discrimination and socialization are interconnected and shape individual preferences (England et al. Reference England, Farkas, Stanek Kilbourne and Dou1988; Kay and Gorman Reference Kay and Gorman2008). Women’s ostensible decisions to invest less in their careers and gravitate to less demanding work settings are not made in a vacuum (Corcoran and Courant Reference Corcoran and Courant1985). Nevertheless, most scholars agree that differences in human capital, along with occupational segregation, account for a significant portion of the gender pay gap (Robson and Wallace Reference Robson and Wallace2001; England Reference England2005; Kay and Gorman Reference Kay and Gorman2008).

Law is a prestige-conscious profession that features “credentialed homogeneity”Footnote 5 and therefore serves as an ideal locus to study, inter alia, gender stratification and income inequality. Although methodologies differ, most studies report that male lawyers earn substantially more than female lawyers (Kay and Gorman Reference Kay and Gorman2008). Scholars continue to evaluate the extent to which these disparities are the result of differences in human capital and female lawyers’ overrepresentation in lower-paying legal market sectors (Dixon and Seron Reference Dixon and Seron1995; Kay and Hagan Reference Kay and Hagan1995; Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009). For example, one longitudinal study of American law school graduates found that female private practitioners earn approximately six thousand dollars less than their similarly situated male counterparts two years into their careers (Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009). Controlling for human capital, work profiles, and other factors, the study determined that male gender is associated with a 5 percent earnings premium. Since Ronit Dinovitzer, Nancy Reichman, and Joyce Sterling analyzed the gender pay gap at a time when lawyers were early in their careers and largely resembled one another, it likely underestimated the pay gap’s magnitude.Footnote 6

Other studies report a larger gender pay gap amongst lawyers. Using data from graduates of the University of Michigan Law School, Mary Noonan, Mary Corcoran, and Paul Courant (Reference Noonan, Corcoran and Courant2005) determined that male and female lawyers begin at roughly equivalent salaries but that the female lawyers earn nearly 40 percent less fifteen years later. The male lawyers enjoyed an earnings premium of over 12 percent after controlling for the lawyers’ human capital assets and occupational practice settings.

A few studies have also suggested that male and female lawyers do not obtain the same returns on their human capital assets. John Hagan and Fiona Kay’s study of Toronto attorneys shows that male private practitioners earn far more from an elite education and experience than female private practitioners do and that much of the gender pay gap is attributable to female lawyers’ lower returns on their capital assets (Hagan Reference Hagan1990; Hagan and Kay Reference Hagan and Kay1995). In a similar vein, Victoria Wass and Robert McNabb (Reference Wass and Mcnabb2006) concluded that female solicitors’ incomes in the United Kingdom would increase by 15 percent if the legal market rewarded their endowments equally to those of male solicitors.

Academic performance is an important indicator of human capital and informs employers’ decisions about hiring and compensation across economic sectors (Miller Reference Miller1998; Piopiunik et al. Reference Piopiunik, Schwerdt, Simon and Woessmann2020). In the labor market, grades serve as a signal of cognitive ability as well as other difficult-to-discern traits such as work ethic and perseverance (Arkes Reference Arkes1999; Piopiunik et al. Reference Piopiunik, Schwerdt, Simon and Woessmann2020). Even employers that are nominally skeptical of the value of academic grades regard them as a necessary screening and sorting mechanism (Rivera Reference Rivera2011). Grades are especially important in the legal profession. According to several studies, law school grades constitute the strongest predictors of attorneys’ incomes (Sander and Bambauer Reference Sander and Bambauer2012).Footnote 7 The effects of grades over time may be stronger than they are immediately following law school (Noonan, Corcoran, and Courant Reference Noonan, Corcoran and Courant2005; Sander and Bambauer Reference Sander and Bambauer2012) and are independent of their role in facilitating access to high-paying positions in corporate law firms (Heinz et al. Reference Heinz, Nelson, Sandefur and Laumann2005, 173; Sander and Bambauer Reference Sander and Bambauer2012, 920). Indeed, grades function as “a double-edged sword: poor grades are as harmful to one’s career as good grades are helpful” (Sander and Bambauer Reference Sander and Bambauer2012, 920). Yet no empirical research heretofore has specifically explored the possibility that American lawyers obtain different economic rewards from law school performance based on gender and that the legal market may depress female lawyers’ earnings by undervaluing their academic achievements.Footnote 8

Gender, Academic Achievement, and Employment

Although social science research has shown that employers use academic performance as a signal of prospective employees’ abilities and that strong academic performance correlates with higher earnings (Wise Reference Wise1975; Jones and Jackson Reference Jones and Jackson1990; M. French et al. Reference French, Homer, Popovici and Robins2015), comparatively little research examines whether gender confounds this correlation. Several mechanisms could cause employers to devalue superior academic performance in women and pay them less than men. First, gender is one of the primary systems of self-other categorization and evokes conscious or unconscious assumptions and stereotypes (Ridgeway Reference Ridgeway1997, 220; Quadlin Reference Quadlin2018, 334). When women succeed in male-dominated fields, they become “honorary men” while simultaneously being punished for failing to conform to traditional feminine stereotypes (Sommerlad Reference Sommerlad2003). The familiar competence-likability tradeoff suggests that women who present as highly competent via their academic achievement will be regarded as aloof and lacking in warmth (Fiske et al. Reference Fiske, Cuddy, Glick and Xu2002; Sommerlad Reference Sommerlad2003; Cuddy, Fiske, and Glick Reference Cuddy, Fiske and Glick2008; Quadlin Reference Quadlin2018). As Madeline Heilman and colleagues (Reference Heilman, Wallen, Fuchs and Tamkins2004, 416) write, “[w]hen acknowledged as successful [women] no longer are saddled with the image of being incompetent, but they may also pay a price. The price is social rejection, taking the form of both dislike and personal derogation, and it appears to have definite consequences for evaluation and recommendations about reward allocation.”

Second, as a result of homophily, employers in male-dominated industries may shift hiring and performance criteria in a way that disfavors women and other underrepresented groups.Footnote 9 For example, employers will shift their hiring preferences from highly educated candidates to “street smart” ones if this shift advantages men (Uhlmann and Cohen Reference Uhlmann and Cohen2005; Phelan, Moss-Racusin, and Rudman Reference Phelan, Moss-Racusin and Rudman2008). These processes are implicit and can occur even among individuals who regard themselves as being committed to gender equality (Kang and Banaji Reference Kang and Banaji2006).

Academic performance is especially important in law (Wilkins and Gulati Reference Wilkins and Mitu Gulati1998). However, the legal profession undermines high-achieving female lawyers in a variety of ways. For example, American law schools feature prototypically male pedagogy (Menkel-Meadow Reference Menkel-Meadow1987; Guinier Reference Guinier1997; Schleef Reference Schleef2001). Feminist scholars have castigated law schools’ adversarialism and reliance on the Socratic method, in particular.Footnote 10 Many women thrive in law school (Schleef Reference Schleef2001), but, akin to the law firm’s “iron maiden,” their success comes at a cost.Footnote 11 Female law students report working harder than male peers and have less time to devote to social activities and self-care.Footnote 12 High-achieving female law students may calculate that their sacrifices will pay off in the long run, but this idea presupposes that employers will reward hard work and acumen over other factors such as their abilities to assimilate into the firm’s “clubbable atmosphere” (McGlynn Reference Mcglynn2003, 170).

That legal work is difficult to evaluate may contribute to the devaluation of high-achieving female lawyers. Lawyers perform a mix of ministerial and analytical tasks, and firms and clients cannot closely supervise their work because of high monitoring costs.Footnote 13 As a result, law firms base promotion and compensation decisions not on work quality but on crude proxies such as a lawyer’s billable hours (Wilkins and Gulati Reference Wilkins and Mitu Gulati1998; Sterling and Reichman Reference Sterling and Reichman2016). Moreover, the abilities that firms reward early in lawyers’ careers are not the ones that they reward at the partnership stage (Wilkins and Gulati Reference Wilkins and Mitu Gulati1998). High-achieving female lawyers may reasonably believe that the qualities that have served them well throughout their careers, such as hard work and obeying their superiors, will continue to benefit them throughout their careers, but as David Wilkins and Mitu Gulati (Reference Wilkins and Mitu Gulati1998, 1677) have explained, law firms are not meritocratic “tournaments” but more akin to figure-skating competitions because subjective, and occasionally idiosyncratic, factors influence firms’ assessments of individual lawyers as they rise through the ranks (Galanter and Palay Reference Galanter and Palay1994). In particular, female lawyers are at a disadvantage with respect to the important business development metric: “[B]ecause so few associates actually bring in any new business to their firms, partners make promotion decisions based on their expectations that an associate will bring in business. These expectations are largely based on subjective criteria that are very susceptible to being influenced by stereotypes about the roles and desires of women” (Epstein et al. Reference Epstein, Saute, Oglensky and Gever1995, 365). Law firms could regard superior academic performance as an asset for developing business when found in a male attorney but, when found in a female attorney, they regard it as evidence that she is “too intellectual” to forge relationships with clients (Gorman Reference Gorman2006; Rivera Reference Rivera2012).

Natasha Quadlin’s (Reference Quadlin2018) research on entry-level hiring illustrates the degree to which perceptions of academic achievement are gendered. In a recent study, she found that high-achieving female candidates are half as likely to receive callback interviews as their high-achieving male counterparts. They are also less likely to receive interviews than lower-achieving female candidates. When commenting on high-achieving female candidates, employers focused overwhelmingly on likability and deployed terms such as “arrogant” and “lacking in warmth,” even though their assessments were based solely on resumes. Employers did not describe high-achieving male candidates or other female candidates in these terms (Quadlin Reference Quadlin2018, 348).

Lastly, the process of setting compensation itself may also have gendered aspects that impact the earnings of high-achieving female lawyers in particular. High-achieving female lawyers could be more reluctant than male colleagues to tout their accomplishments and initiate discussions regarding pay increases and bonuses (Babcock and Laschever Reference Babcock and Laschever2003; Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009). Female solo practitioners may be apt to avoid clashes with their clients over unpaid fees (Davis Reference Davis2008). In other words, pay disparities could be a function of high-achieving female lawyers’ tendency to seek “invisibility.”Footnote 14 The preference for invisibility is entirely logical as a conflict- and discrimination-avoidance strategy but could undermine the most qualified lawyers’ abilities to leverage and publicize their value.

Although law firms and clients undoubtedly seek out smart and capable lawyers, this may not necessarily translate to higher earnings for women who exceed the base level of competence—graduation from law school and successful admission into the legal profession. Differential rewards for similar academic performance would also lead to a gender pay gap even in the absence of other appreciable differences between male and female lawyers.

METHOD

The Data

To assess if gender affects lawyers’ earnings, and if high-achieving women are devalued in the legal market, we relied on survey data from members of the State Bar of Texas (State Bar), which is the second-largest active-member bar association in the United States.Footnote 15 Texas’s legal market is characterized by a wide variety of private law firms as well as large governmental and corporate sectors.Footnote 16 A lawyer must maintain membership in the State Bar to practice law in Texas.Footnote 17

In coordination with the State Bar’s Department of Research, the researchers surveyed State Bar members in March 2016 regarding their 2015 earnings from legal practice, including their bonuses. In addition to questions related to income and bonuses, the survey solicited demographic information and certain measures of human capital: years of practice experience, undergraduate and law school class rank, and undergraduate majors. Lawyers also provided information about their occupational practice settings (that is, whether they worked in private practice, government, public interest, in-house, or in a non-law-related capacity). Private practitioners received additional practice-setting questions relating to the size of their law firms, their roles within the firms, and their legal practice areas.

The authors were unable to solicit information regarding the law schools that lawyers attended as part of the income survey.Footnote 18 However, 75 percent of Texas lawyers attend Texas law schools.Footnote 19 To ensure that differences in law school prestige would be unlikely to affect the results, the authors compared enrollments by gender of the four highest-ranking Texas law schools (Baylor, Houston, Southern Methodist, and University of Texas) against the enrollments of the five lowest-ranking Texas law schools (St. Mary’s, South Texas, Texas Southern, Texas Tech, and Texas Wesleyan) using American Bar Association data from 2009 to 2013.Footnote 20 The former were among the top sixty American law schools, and the latter were outside the top one hundred during the same time period, according to the influential US News and World Report rankings.Footnote 21 T-tests indicated no differences in enrollments based on gender between the higher-ranking and lower-ranking schools for any individual year or in the aggregate.Footnote 22

In total, 11,793 Texas lawyers ultimately completed the income survey over a one-month period.Footnote 23 Survey respondents’ backgrounds resemble those of State Bar members, except that women and less experienced attorneys are slightly overrepresented in the survey results. Of the respondents, 41 percent were female and 44 percent had been practicing for ten years or less. The State Bar is 35 percent female, and 30 percent of its members have been practicing for ten years or less.Footnote 24 To conduct our analysis, we focus on the 9,060 attorneys who practice full-time.Footnote 25 Analyzing pay differences only among full-time attorneys takes into account that female lawyers are more likely than male lawyers to fully or partially drop out of the workforce to care for family.Footnote 26 Removing respondents with unknown undergraduate and/or law school class rank and other missing information leads to a final analytical sample of 7,617 respondents.

Measures

We consider the effects of numerous variables on lawyers’ differential earnings, including differences in lawyers’ undergraduate educations and practice areas that have not received significant attention in previous studies. The following specific measures are used to disaggregate the gender gap in earnings and to compare the earnings of high-achieving female lawyers to those of other attorneys.

Dependent Variable

Income refers to attorneys’ gross income from legal practice in 2015 (including any bonuses).

Demographic Background Controls

Gender is coded “1” for women and “0” for men. Race is coded “1” for minorities and whites and “0” for non-Hispanic white. Region is a binary variable, coded “1” for “metropolitan area” and coded “0” for “non-metropolitan area.” We rely upon the US government’s Federal Office of Management and Budget’s classification system for metropolitan and non-metropolitan areas.

Human Capital Controls

Practice experience is reported by years of law practice experience, up to and including the year 2015. The choices were (1) two years or less; (2) three to six years; (3) seven to ten years; (4) eleven to fifteen years; (5) sixteen to twenty years; (6) twenty-one to twenty-five years; and (7) over twenty-five years of law practice experience. An undergraduate major is composed of four undergraduate major categories: (1) social sciences; (2) humanities; (3) business (including economics); and (4) science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM), referring to the range of science majors and engineering (for example, math, physics, biology, engineering, and so on). Social science is the comparison major group in our statistical analyses.

Undergraduate class rank was assessed using the following question: “which of the following best describes your class rank upon graduation from college?” Possible responses were: (1) tenth percentile; (2) twenty-fifth percentile; (3) fiftieth percentile; (4) seventy-fifth percentile; and (5) do not know. Undergraduate class rank is an independent measure of human capital but can also serve as a crude proxy for law school prestige because law schools admit students based largely on their undergraduate performance and law school admission test scores (Wongsurawat Reference Wongsurawat2009). It is a “poorly kept secret” that law school admission offices focus on these criteria to the exclusion of others (Garfield Reference Garfield2013, 44).Footnote 27 The seventy-fifth percentile is the reference category in our statistical analyses.

Law school class rank was measured with the following question: “which of the following best describes your class rank upon graduation from law school?” Possible response choices were: (1) tenth percentile; (2) twenty-fifth percentile; (3) fiftieth percentile; (4) seventy-fifth percentile; and (5) do not know. The seventy-fifth percentile is the reference category. In the third section, we combine the first two categories to represent “high achievement” and the third and fourth categories to create a “lower achievement” category. The “do not know” responses are excluded from the analyses.

Occupational Setting Controls

Under occupation, respondents were asked: “for 2015, what was your primary occupation?” Respondents could specify: (1) for-profit corporate/in-house counsel; (2) government; (3) non-profit/public interest; (4) non-law-related; and (5) private law practice. The respondents could only select one setting. Non-law related is the reference group for our statistical analyses.

Occupational Setting Controls for Private Practitioners

Firm size was measured with the question: “for 2015, how many attorneys, including yourself, worked in your firm?” The survey instrument instructed respondents to consider all locations of their firms. Firm size is a continuous measure ranging from > 1 to 1,890. Role includes six dummy codes: (1) associate; (2) equity partner; (3) non-equity partner; (4) counsel; (5) other (for example, contract attorney); and (6) solo practitioner. To estimate the effects of role on income, we used associates as the reference group. Practice area refers to five dummy codes: (1) family law; (2) business; (3) personal litigation; (4) commercial litigation; and (5) criminal law. Although respondents could list more than one practice area, we focused on their primary areas.

Analytical Approach

The Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition is a widely used method of measuring differentials in earnings between two groups (Blinder Reference Blinder1973; Oaxaca Reference Oaxaca1973). Under this method, the gap in mean earnings is broken down into components. One component estimates the effects of the independent variables on the earnings differential, whereas the other estimates the portion of the differential that is unexplained by these variables and is suggestive of discrimination (Thaxton Reference Thaxton2018). In our study, we assessed the effects of demographic characteristics, human capital assets, and occupation on the differential earnings of male and female lawyers as well as those of the subsample of male and female private practitioners.Footnote 28 We hypothesized that the gender pay gap could not be fully explained by differences in demographics, capital assets, or practice settings (including attorneys’ private practice roles).

Our second hypothesis was that the legal market devalues superior academic performance in female lawyers. To test this proposition, we used OLS regression to compare the earnings of high-achieving female lawyers to high-achieving male lawyers, lower-achieving male lawyers, and lower-achieving female lawyers across practice settings and private practice roles. OLS regression analysis permitted us to quantify the premium associated with superior academic performance for different groups of male and female lawyers while controlling for other determinants of income (Zagorsky and Lupica Reference Zagorsky and Lupica2008).

Results

Gender and Earnings

In Table 1, we provide the descriptive statistics for our analytical sample of 7,617 full-time Texas lawyers divided by gender. As Table 1 indicates, male lawyers earn significantly more than female lawyers. In 2015, male lawyers earned thirty-five thousand dollars more at the median and sixty-four thousand dollars more at the mean than their female counterparts. Previous studies have found similar disparities (Noonan, Corcoran, and Courant Reference Noonan, Corcoran and Courant2005, 858; Robson and Wallace Reference Robson and Wallace2001, 87).

TABLE 1. Descriptive statistics of study variables (with t-tests)

Notes: p < 0.10; * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001.

Our descriptive results also point to other important differences between the sample’s male and female lawyers. Female lawyers are underrepresented in private practice and overrepresented in government, public interest, and in-house positions in comparison to male lawyers (Hull and Nelson Reference Hull and Nelson2000, 241; Noonan, Corcoran, and Courant Reference Noonan, Corcoran and Courant2005, 857). Among private practitioners, female lawyers are more commonly found in associate positions and less commonly in solo practice. Male lawyers are much more often in law firm equity partner positions: 17 percent of male private practitioners are equity partners compared to only 8 percent of female private practitioners (Kay and Hagan Reference Kay and Hagan1998; Hull and Nelson Reference Hull and Nelson2000). In addition, female attorneys more frequently practice in “feminized” fields of law such as family law than in “masculine” ones such as business and commercial litigation (Bolton and Muzio Reference Bolton and Muzio2007). We detect no differences in the firm size of the male and female lawyers in the sample.Footnote 29

The lawyers also differ in terms of their human capital assets. The male lawyers in the sample are significantly more experienced than the female lawyers are. They also more frequently majored in STEM and business, arguably more rigorous majors that command greater awards in the labor market.Footnote 30 However, the female lawyers were more likely to have excelled academically as undergraduates. Although some studies report significant gender differences in law school performance, the class ranks of the male and female lawyers in our sample are similar.Footnote 31

To test whether the gender pay gap can be attributed wholly to differences in human capital and occupational segregation, we apply a series of regression decompositions in Table 2. We first regress the effects of our independent variables on income. The standardized coefficients represent the effects of female gender compared to male gender on income, with negative coefficients reflecting a gender gap. Next, we use decompositions to assess the percentage of the gender pay gap that is explained by differences between the male and female lawyers in our sample. In Model 1, we examine the initial gender gap in income with no other controls. We then add demographic background factors (Model 2), human capital assets (Model 3), and, finally, occupational setting to the model (Model 4) to estimate their effects on the gender earnings gap.

TABLE 2. Regression decomposition coefficients and percentage of the gender income gap explained with alternate models, including selected controls

Note: Demographic background controls are race and region. Human capital controls are years of practice experience, undergraduate major, undergraduate class rank, and law school class rank. Occupational controls include five categories: (1) for-profit corporate/in-house counsel; (2) government; (3) non-profit public interest; (4) private practice; and the reference category of (5) non-law related.

Table 2 demonstrates that there is initially a 19 percent earning gaps between the male and female lawyers in the sample. This gap diminishes somewhat as we add controls for demographic backgrounds, human capital, and occupation. Nevertheless, even after controlling for these factors, the female lawyers in our Texas sample earn 9 percent less than the male lawyers. Thus, differences in demographic background, human capital assets, and occupational settings fail to explain the gender pay gap, and 83 percent of the gap is unexplained after all of these variables are included in our model.

The majority of attorneys in our Texas sample are private practitioners. Previous studies have found that the gender gap may be especially large in private practice (Dixon and Seron Reference Dixon and Seron1995; Kay and Hagan Reference Kay and Hagan1995). The income differences that have been observed in this setting could be a product of female lawyers’ underrepresentation in high-paying equity partner positions (see Table 1) and female lawyers’ selection into “feminized” fields as well as discrimination (Bolton and Muzio Reference Bolton and Muzio2007). To better understand the gender gap in private practice, we disaggregate the gender pay gap among the sample’s private practitioners, once again using Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition (Antecol, Cobb-Clark, and Helland Reference Antecol, Cobb-Clark and Helland2014). The decompositions in Table 3 control for demographic factors, human capital assets, legal practice area, firm size, and law firm role.

TABLE 3. Regression decomposition coefficients and percentage of the gender income gap explained with alternate models, including selected controls for private practitioners

Note: Demographic background controls are race and region. Human capital controls are years of practice experience, undergraduate major, undergraduate class rank, and law school class rank. The Firm size control is measured continuously. The role control equates to equity partner, non-equity partner, of counsel, solo practitioner, and associate as the reference category. The practice area controls include family law, business, personal litigation, commercial litigation, and criminal law as the reference category.

As Table 3 shows, there is a gender earnings gap of 18 percent among private practitioners. Some of this gap is attributable to differences in human capital assets and the female lawyers’ overrepresentation in less lucrative law firm roles and practice areas. Nevertheless, an earnings gap of 8 percent remains after controlling for the aforementioned factors, and 79 percent of the earnings gap is unexplained, signifying that omitted variables, including possible discrimination, are driving the gap. These results signify that the legal profession’s gender pay gap cannot be reduced to the relatively minor differences in capital assets or occupational segregation. The underrepresentation of female private practitioners in equity partner positions and in the most lucrative legal practice areas also plays a minor role. Since the gender pay gap is not predominately caused by differences between male and female lawyers, we theorize that differential valuing of like assets and achievements may be a major factor. In the next section, we explore the legal market’s gendered treatment of high academic achievement.

The Earning of High-Achieving Women

As noted, empirical researchers have consistently found that academic performance is a key measure of human capital and predicts earnings across educational contexts (Wise Reference Wise1975; Jones and Jackson Reference Jones and Jackson1990; M. French et al. Reference French, Homer, Popovici and Robins2015). With respect to attorneys specifically, superior performance in law school not only opens up pathways to lucrative positions in corporate law firms but also has a strong independent effect on income regardless of the practice setting. Law school grades are by far the most important predictor of career success if success is defined in pecuniary terms (Sander and Bambauer Reference Sander and Bambauer2012). We used OLS regression to determine the effects of law school class rank and other variables on the incomes of the Texas lawyers in our sample (see Table 4).

TABLE 4. Predictors of earnings (full-time attorneys)

Notes: p < 0.10; * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001. Standardized regression coefficients are shown in the table, with t-statistics.

a Compared to males.

b Compared to non-Hispanic whites.

c Compared to the “Social Sciences” category.

d Compared to the 75th percentile class rank.

e Compared to the “non-law” category.

Our analysis in Table 4 shows the impact of various human capital assets on earnings. As expected, law school performance has the largest effect: graduating at the top of one’s class (tenth and twenty-fifth percentile) increases earnings by 25 percent in Model 1 and 22 percent in Model 2. Undergraduate class rank and STEM or business majors also have an independent effect on earnings in both models.Footnote 32 Unsurprisingly in light of the statistical analyses in the previous section, female gender is negatively correlated with income. Minority race also has a small negative effect.

To determine if, consistent with our theory, the legal market devalues the academic performance of high-achieving female lawyers especially, we next divided our sample into four groups based on law school class rank and gender: high-achieving women, high-achieving men, lower-achieving women, and lower-achieving men. We used OLS regression to compare the earnings of the latter three groups of lawyers to those of high-achieving female lawyers while controlling for demographic background, human capital assets, and segregation into different legal market sectors. Table 5 Model 1 regresses income for the entire sample while controlling for demographic and human capital differences. Table 5 Model 2 adds lawyers’ occupational practice settings. If our theory about the devaluation of high-achieving female lawyers’ academic performance is correct, then this group of attorneys should earn less than high-achieving male lawyers and potentially other groups as well.

TABLE 5. Predicting income by gender and achievement (full-time attorneys)

Notes: * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001. Standardized regression coefficients are shown in the table, with t-statistics.

a Compared to non-Hispanic whites.

b Compared to the “social sciences” category.

c Compared to the 75th percentile class rank.

d Compared to the “non-law” category.

Our results largely support our theory. As shown in Table 5 Model 1, high-achieving male lawyers earn 13 percent more than high-achieving female lawyers do. High-achieving female lawyers earn the same as lower-achieving male lawyers, and only 7 percent more than lower-achieving female lawyers. These results hold even after controlling for occupational setting in Table 5 Model 2. High-achieving male lawyers outearn high-achieving female lawyers by 11 percent, suggesting that differential job settings cannot explain the earnings disparities between these groups.Footnote 33 Under this model, high-achieving female lawyers also do not outearn lower-achieving male lawyers and enjoy only a modest earnings premium of 6 percent over lower-achieving female lawyers.

Figure 1 illustrates the gender earnings gap by occupational practice setting and academic achievement. We can see that female lawyers with the highest academic performance earn less than their similarly situated male colleagues in every occupational setting. The earnings gap between high-achieving male and female lawyers is largest in private practice (36 percent), followed by non-profit/public interest (28 percent). The smallest gender gap in earnings is observed among high-achieving male and female lawyers in government (7 percent), likely due to standardized salary structures (Dixon and Seron Reference Dixon and Seron1995).

FIGURE 1. Comparison of high-achieving female lawyers’ incomes by occupation.

To analyze the earnings of high-achieving female lawyers in private practice further, we conducted additional regression analyses on private practitioners’ incomes. In Table 6, we divide the private practitioners into four groups based on class rank and gender. In our analyses, we controlled for demographic background, human capital differences as well as private practitioners’ firm size, legal practice area, and law firm role. This allowed us to separate the effects of academic performance and gender from other possible causes of earning disparities such as the underrepresentation of female lawyers in equity partner positions and overrepresentation in less lucrative legal practice fields (see Table 1).

TABLE 6. Predicting income by gender and achievement among full-time private practitioners

Notes: * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001. Standardized regression coefficients are shown in the table, with t-statistics.

a Compared to non-Hispanic whites.

b Compared to the “social sciences” category.

c Compared to the 75th percentile class rank.

d Compared to the associate.

e Compared to criminal law.

As we predicted, female private practitioners receive little benefit from superior law school performance. They earn less than high-achieving male private practitioners and no more than lower-achieving male private practitioners under all models. After all controls are added in Table 6, female lawyers earn 10 percent less than high-achieving male lawyers and only 4 percent more than lower-achieving female lawyers. Thus, the inclusion of firm size, practice area, and role in our models moderated the differences in earnings slightly. Finally, as set out in Figure 2, the magnitude of the gender pay gap depends in part on a private practitioner’s law firm roles. High-achieving female lawyers earn as much as their high-achieving male colleagues in non-equity partner positions. However, in equity partner positions, they earn 51 percent less than high-achieving male counterparts and 17 percent less than lower-achieving male counterparts. The same trend is observed in solo practice although differences are not as stark: high-achieving female solos earn 36 percent less than high-achieving male solos and 16 percent less than lower-achieving male solos.

FIGURE 2. Comparison of high-achieving female private practitioners’ incomes by role.

Notes: * Income differentials estimated from Model 4 in Table 5.

In sum, consistent with our theory, high-achieving female lawyers do not reap the same benefits from their academic performance as male lawyers do. They earn less than male lawyers with the same law school performance across practice settings, with income differences most pronounced in private practice. When they practice as equity partners or solo practitioners, they earn significantly less than both high-achieving and lower-achieving male lawyers. For female lawyers, equaling or exceeding the qualifications of male colleagues is simply not enough to achieve pay parity.

IMPLICATIONS

A robust literature has sought to identify the causes of the legal profession’s gender pay gap. Relying on a large cross-sectional sample of full-time lawyers, we have confirmed the existence of a gender gap of approximately thirty-five thousand dollars at the median and sixty-four thousand dollars at the mean that cannot be attributed solely to differences in human capital investments or female lawyers’ overrepresentation in less remunerative legal market sectors or roles.

Contrary to the suppositions of some human capital theorists, female lawyers largely resemble their male counterparts in human capital assets (Becker Reference Becker1964; Goldin and Polachek Reference Goldin and Polachek1987). We have considered lawyers’ practice experience and law school performance as well as oft-neglected factors such as undergraduate education. The female lawyers in our sample are somewhat less experienced than their male counterparts and are less likely to have majored in STEM or business, but they match their counterparts in law school performance and surpass them in undergraduate performance.Footnote 34 Differences in demographic backgrounds and human capital assets explain only 13 percent of the gender earnings gap. After adding controls for occupational sector, 83 percent of the earning difference remains unexplained.

In examining the legal profession’s gender pay gap, past scholarship has concentrated on the shunting of female lawyers into less lucrative legal market sectors and a glass ceiling that blocks women from ascending to lucrative private practice positions (Epstein et al. Reference Epstein, Saute, Oglensky and Gever1995; Noonan, Corcoran, and Courant Reference Noonan, Corcoran and Courant2005; Wald Reference Wald2009). Consistent with this literature, the female lawyers in our sample are less commonly found in private practice and in law firm equity partner positions. However, female private practitioners still earn 8 percent less than male lawyers after controlling for firm size, practice area, and partnership status. Female private practitioners undoubtedly face pitfalls in the competition for partner positions (Kay, Alarie, and Adjei Reference Kay, Alarie and Adjei2016), but even ones who ascend to these positions can expect to earn substantially less than similarly situated male colleagues.

Law has historically been male dominated. In this article, we have theorized that female lawyers’ academic success could facilitate access to lucrative positions but also engender concerns about sociability (Schleef Reference Schleef2001; Heilman et al. Reference Heilman, Wallen, Fuchs and Tamkins2004). Moreover, since performance and compensation assessments in law are nebulous and prone to subjectivity, we posited that legal employers and clients could consciously or unconsciously shift compensation criteria to disadvantage high-achieving women or that these women may fear publicizing their value (Wilkins and Gulati Reference Wilkins and Mitu Gulati1998; Williams and Richardson Reference Williams and Richardson2010; Regan and Rohrer Reference Regan and Rohrer2012). Our findings largely accord with these theories.

We demonstrate, through a series of OLS regression analyses, that high-achieving female lawyers are devalued in the legal market. High-achieving female lawyers earn 11 percent less than their similarly situated male lawyers and the same as lower-achieving male lawyers. Disparities are especially pronounced in private practice where high-achieving female lawyers earn 36 percent less than their high-achieving male counterparts. But inequities persist across occupational settings, with high-achieving male lawyers outearning their high-achieving female colleagues in public interest and in-house positions by 28 percent and 20 percent respectively. Academically accomplished female lawyers fare best in government where they earn only 7 percent less than similarly situated male lawyers. Government lawyers are paid according to fixed pay schedules based on seniority, rendering compensation decisions less subjective and biased (Dixon and Seron Reference Dixon and Seron1995; Hall Reference Hall2012).

Our findings raise the counterintuitive possibility that excessive focus on academic performance may harm female lawyers from an income maximization perspective.Footnote 35 Academic performance is the single greatest concern of law students (Krieger and Sheldon Reference Krieger and Sheldon2015). While superior academic performance facilitates access to desirable positions in corporate law firms, the benefits are not equal between the genders. Firms (and clients) claim to seek the “best and brightest” attorneys, but their actual compensation practices do not accord with this rhetoric (S. French Reference French1999).

Since the legal market does not fully reward female lawyers for academic achievement, aspiring lawyers should arguably direct some of their energies to other worthwhile endeavors. Networking is a prime example. Under the current system, female law students may be well served to focus on forging relationships with classmates and lawyers upon which they can later capitalize rather than concentrating solely on academics.Footnote 36 Fiona Kay’s (Reference Kay and Ethel2018) recent study highlights the importance of networks for minority groups especially. However, female law students have more familial responsibilities than their male peers, leaving little time for both studying and networking (Law School Survey of Student Engagement 2019). The tradeoff is not nearly as acute for male law students because they generally have more free time to devote to activities outside of law school, and any career investments they choose to make will likely boost their earnings vis-à-vis other groups.

One explanation for why women may not benefit from superior academic performance to the same degree that men do is because legal employers emphasize “cultural fit” over academic achievement and other objective factors once candidates demonstrate a baseline of competence. Employers will even dismiss their work as “not rocket science” to avoid hiring or rewarding high-achieving candidates who lack the right fit (Rivera Reference Rivera2012). The decision to favor fit could even appear economically rational if firms regard fit as a proxy for qualities such as the ability to generate business from clients.Footnote 37 Kay and Hagan’s (Reference Hagan and Kay1995) finding that the effect of bringing in clients is strongly significant for women’s partnership prospects but not for men’s is a manifestation of the tendency to take for granted that male lawyers naturally have “what it takes,” whereas female lawyers must go over and beyond to demonstrate it (Gorman Reference Gorman2006).

Legal practice settings differ in their cultures as well as the representation of women in positions of authority. Yet sizeable earning disparities exist among attorneys in private practice, in-house positions, as well as in the public interest sector. While the precise mechanisms by which women are disadvantaged in these settings probably differ, female lawyers will rarely “fit” into any of these settings as well as male lawyers do because they do not conform to long-standing expectations of how lawyers look and behave.Footnote 38 In most legal practice settings, the archetypal attorney is still very much a white male (Anleu Reference Anleu1992; Wald Reference Wald2009). Women lawyers are often conscious of this reality:

There is a little bit paternalistic attitude towards women. You can either be relegated to the role of being sort of a submissive, little worker bee or, if you’re more assertive…. I feel that sometimes I scare the guys a bit. You can be in a meeting and … they’re comfortable swearing and dropping the F-bomb here and there and so am I quite frankly, but because … there are ladies present, sometimes they’ll hold themselves back. (Garth and Sterling Reference Garth and Sterling2018, 149)

Female lawyers can match their male counterparts in human capital and even adopt “male” speech patterns and hobbies and still find that they do not have the right “fit.”Footnote 39

Even the attainment of highly sought-after and powerful equity partner positions hardly ensures pay parity. To the contrary, high-achieving female equity partners earn 51 percent less than similarly situated male equity partners and 17 percent less than lower-achieving male equity partners. We also see large disparities among solo practitioners. Income differences are smaller among associates and non-equity partners, and higher-achieving female lawyers outearn lower-achieving male attorneys in these roles. Pay disparities may be less pronounced among high-achieving male and female non-equity partners and associates because their compensation is largely set ex ante. With respect to equity partners and solo practitioners conversely, compensation depends on subjective ex post assessments by fellow partners and clients.Footnote 40 Firms and clients can dismiss or underplay good outcomes obtained by high-achieving female lawyers to justify paying them less than male lawyers with the same outcomes (Williams and Richardson Reference Williams and Richardson2010). Accomplished female attorneys may also be less apt to protest when they are not paid according to their worth because of the fear of backlash and discrimination (Kanter Reference Kanter1977).

In addition, legal acumen—as measured by law school performance—could conceivably be less important for equity partners and solo practitioners. In these roles, lawyers’ incomes are based largely on their ability to develop business and sell their firms’ services (Williams and Richardson Reference Williams and Richardson2010). Formally or informally, most law firms are “eat what you kill.”Footnote 41 Legal acumen could be more tied to associate and non-equity partner compensation because firms ultimately need lawyers in these roles to produce high-quality work for firm rainmakers (Wilkins and Gulati Reference Wilkins and Mitu Gulati1998; Reichman and Sterling Reference Reichman and Sterling2004).

Nevertheless, male private practitioners receive a substantial earnings premium from high law school class rank across roles, including in equity partner and solo practitioner positions. The fact that high-achieving female lawyers do not receive comparable income boosts from superior academic performance suggests that its connotations are more mixed for this group. Quadlin (Reference Quadlin2018) similarly found that high academic achievement does not benefit female candidates in the entry-level employment market and attributed this phenomenon to the competence-likability tradeoff. However, unlike Quadlin, we do not find that higher class rank is associated with lower returns for women. Indeed, high-achieving female lawyers earn more than lower-achieving ones across occupational practice settings and private practice roles. The legal market ascribes some value to female lawyers’ academic achievement, just not enough to boost their earnings over less-accomplished men.

A growing literature has documented that the legal profession’s gender pay gap is less of a product of differences between male and female lawyers and more of a product of differential returns on human and social capital (Hagan Reference Hagan1990; Kay and Hagan Reference Kay and Hagan1995; Wass and McNabb Reference Wass and Mcnabb2006; Ryan and Dawe Reference Ryan and Dawe2021). Our conclusion that superior law school performance rewards male lawyers far more than female lawyers is in line with Fiona Kay and Jean Wallace’s (Reference Kay and Wallace2009, 445) conclusion with respect to mentoring:

Although female lawyers are just as likely to seek out and secure mentors, the relationship does not yield the same benefits accrued to male lawyers. The social position of women within the legal profession does not afford them the strategic capacity to mobilize their social capital … to secure coveted career outcomes, particularly in the form of earnings and career advancement.

Equalizing differences in human capital and social capital is insufficient to remedy the gender wage gap if men can more effectively leverage any capital that they possess.

Comparing our findings to those of earlier studies, it appears that employers may place less emphasis on female lawyers’ academic performance than they have in the past (Dixon and Seron Reference Dixon and Seron1995). Future research should examine whether the progress that female lawyers have made in matching male lawyers in terms of education and other capital assets has caused employers and clients to implicitly downplay these assets in hiring and compensation decisions. In the absence of formal barriers, are clients and firms increasingly deploying fit and other intangible criteria to the detriment of high-achieving female lawyers? The steep gender earning differentials among solo practitioners and law firm equity partners especially imply that they are.

Structural changes have exacerbated these tendencies. For the last twenty years, private law firms have moved away from so-called lockstep compensation schemes, whereby a lawyer’s pay generally increases by a fixed increment for every year of service, toward “merit-based” pay (Donn, Cahill, and Mihal Reference Donn, Cahill and Mihal2015; Weiss Reference Weiss2020). The purported rationale for this shift in compensation schemes is that merit-based pay allows firms to retain their most talented and productive attorneys. Yet these schemes inevitably disadvantage high-achieving female lawyers because firms’ evaluations of merit are gendered and often ignore that male successes depend on the unrecognized and unrewarded efforts of women and minorities (González Reference González2014; Donn, Cahill, and Mihal Reference Donn, Cahill and Mihal2015).

To begin to remedy the legal profession’s gender pay gap, leaders of the organized bar must highlight the inequitable effects of purportedly merit-based compensation schemes and exhort firms to adopt lockstep schemes for partners, associates, and other employees. Standardized salary structures are still used by governmental employers as well some private law firms in setting associates’ and non-equity partners’ base salaries, and these settings unsurprisingly feature smaller pay disparities (Dixon and Seron Reference Dixon and Seron1995).

Firms must also be more transparent about their compensation decisions. Although efforts to require reporting of gender pay gaps have floundered in the United States, the United Kingdom has had some success with a voluntary reporting regime (Lee Reference Lee2021). Firms that are committed to pay equity may calculate that the disclosure of (non-)pay gaps will advantage them in attorney recruitment and business development. Corporate clients have been exerting pressure on law firms to hire and promote diverse attorneys and could presumably insist that their firms report on gender pay gaps as well.Footnote 42 Recent lawsuits have also highlighted troubling gender pay disparities at some law firms, undermining law firms’ public images.Footnote 43 While law firms and other legal employers should pay women equally even in the absence of a business case for doing so, if corporations are disinclined to retain firms that have troubling records on diversity and pay equity,Footnote 44 law firms may start to assess fit differently and reward the human and social capital of female attorneys on equal terms with that of male attorneys.

Some legal profession scholars have also maintained that the presence of a critical mass of female lawyers, particularly in positions of power, will transform hiring and compensation practices (Hagan and Kay Reference Hagan and Kay1995; Gorman Reference Gorman2005; González Reference González2014). There is some evidence that having more female decision-makers in firms increases the likelihood that women will be hired and promoted in law firms.Footnote 45 The gender pay gap could conceivably decrease in size, and female lawyers’ capital assets could cease to be devalued as more and more female lawyers ascend to managerial positions. Female subordinates might also be more willing to initiate discussions regarding compensation decisions with female managers (Donn, Cahill, and Mihal Reference Donn, Cahill and Mihal2015).

However, optimism on the preceding fronts must be tempered. First and foremost, the legal profession’s gender pay gap exists across practice settings. While high-achieving women fare best in the public sector, the private sector’s adoption of public sector pay models will not eliminate the gender pay gap entirely. For example, income disparities could arise even where male and female attorneys are paid the same salaries through allegedly merit-based bonus structures (Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009).

Corporate clients’ professed commitment to diversity is also not new: General Motors and other prominent companies have urged their outside law firms to staff diverse attorneys on their matters since the 1980s (Wilkins Reference Wilkins2003). But corporate clients, by and large, have not changed their legal spending to respond to firms’ records on diversity (Braithwaite Reference Braithwaite2010). Corporate clients’ nominal commitment to diversity may not extend to law firms’ compensation decisions, and firms have little incentive to report on compensation differentials where the black box natures of their governance structures shelter their practices from scrutiny and market pressure (Pearce, Wald, and Ballakrishnen Reference Pearce, Wald and Ballakrishnen2015). Legal disputes surrounding pay disparities are often settled confidentially and without fundamentally altering the structures that gave rise to the disparities in the first place.Footnote 46

Lastly, women in positions of power can also internalize cultures that are hostile to hiring and rewarding women (Rivera Reference Rivera2012), meaning that the presence of female evaluators will not necessarily inure to the benefit of all women. Lauren Rivera and Jayanti Owen’s (Reference Rivera and Owens2021) recent study of one professional firm suggests that the most skilled female candidates are in fact disadvantaged by the presence of female evaluators. Female lawyers who have ascended to the legal profession’s highest rungs likely had to assimilate into a “man’s world” and may expect that the female lawyers who follow them do the same (Mossman Reference Mossman2003). They may be exhausted from their own battles with discrimination, with little energy to advocate for younger colleagues, some of whom may be racially diverse as well (González Reference González2014). The existence of high-profile successes also makes it easier for male lawyers to regard gender as a non-issue (Mossman Reference Mossman2003).

The gender pay gap is not a function of the differences between male and female attorneys. Rather, assessments of female lawyers’ qualifications and accomplishments are processed through the prism of gender. The legal profession can begin to address gender pay gaps by adopting alternative and more transparent compensation schemes and by promoting individuals who are prepared to disrupt long-standing pay inequities.

Limitations

This study’s sample consists of Texas attorneys who practice law full-time. Since the sample is not representative of lawyers nationwide, our results cannot necessarily be extrapolated to other jurisdictions. Gender may have less impact on earnings outside of Texas, and female lawyers could obtain greater rewards from their law school performance in other states. Texas has a sophisticated legal market, but it is possible that other states have made more progress in equalizing earnings between male and female attorneys.

We also do not specifically consider the impact of law school prestige as part of this study. Because the female lawyers in our sample academically outperformed the male lawyers at the undergraduate level and do not appear to have attended lower-ranked Texas law schools than their male counterparts, it is unlikely that the omission of this variable affected our results. Nevertheless, it is conceivable that full access to respondents’ educational information would reveal differences in law school prestige that could impact the size of the observed income differentials.

Lastly, our survey instrument focused predominately on human capital assets and occupational practice settings and did not address familial factors that may impact earnings (Becker Reference Becker1985; Robson and Wallace Reference Robson and Wallace2001). This concern is mitigated somewhat because we do not consider lawyers who practice part-time to care for children, for example. Previous studies have found that neither familial factors nor hours worked explain the gender pay gap (Noonan, Corcoran, and Courant Reference Noonan, Corcoran and Courant2005; Reichman and Sterling Reference Reichman and Sterling2013). Yet, even assuming that the female lawyers in our sample do not work as many hours as their male counterparts because of family responsibilities, these differences do not explain why high-achieving female lawyers receive only modest boosts in income over lower-achieving female peers. Differences in hours worked should also be reflected in income differentials across law firm roles, but high-achieving female lawyers earn the same as similarly situated male counterparts in non-equity partner positions and more than lower-achieving male counterparts in associate positions. Only in equity partner positions do they earn far less than both groups.

Conclusion

Scholars have long sought to identify the sources of the legal profession’s gender pay gap. This study has determined that female lawyers’ differential human capital investments and alleged self-selection into less lucrative and demanding occupational practice settings cannot account for the gender pay gap. We also show that superior law school performance is far more important for male lawyers than female lawyers. Despite the legal profession’s well-known credentialism, high-achieving female lawyers do not outearn their lower-achieving male counterparts.

Ultimately, female lawyers are unlikely to achieve pay parity by matching the human capital assets of male lawyers because gender confounds the legal market’s response to these assets. Superior law school performance may mark a woman not only as competent but also as antisocial. Depending on the gender of the lawyer being assessed, law can be, and cannot be, “rocket science.” Law firms and clients can also downplay the relevance of certain traits when they are found in female lawyers, especially if the latter are less likely to challenge compensation decisions and tout their successes for fear of backlash.

Women have made unquestionable progress in the legal profession and can be found in positions of power across occupational practice settings (Kanter Reference Kanter1977). However, men continue to predominate and will have affinities for lawyers who resemble them. The legal profession cannot eliminate the gender pay gap merely by equalizing opportunities that male lawyers are better positioned to leverage. Rather, legal employers need to shift away from individualized, black box compensation schemes that are susceptible to bias and do not fully reward female lawyers for their career investments. Women’s continuing advancement inside and outside of the profession may help to facilitate this needed disruption.

Footnotes

This research benefited from the grant support of the AccessLex Institute, Directed Grants Program, https://www.accesslex.org/research/awarded-grants?f%5B0%5D=awarded_grant_status%3A310. For an overview of the data, see Markovic and Plickert 2018, 2019.

1. Bureau of Labors Statistics 2021.

2. International Bar Association 2019.

3. For a summary of empirical research on the topic, see Kay and Gorman Reference Kay and Gorman2008.

4. Sociologists claim that occupational segregation results from the interaction between labor markets and gender socialization (England et al. Reference England, Farkas, Stanek Kilbourne and Dou1988).

5. Lawyers are characterized by credentialed homogeneity because they have the same basic educations and qualifications and are part of a nominally unified profession (Hagan Reference Hagan1990).

6. Ghazala Azmat and Rosa Ferrer (Reference Azmat and Ferrer2017) purport to show—using the same dataset as Ronit Dinovitzer, Nancy Reichman, and Joyce Sterling—that the gender gap among law firm associates can be reduced to differences in hours billed and business origination, which they view as reliable measures of performance. There are reasons to question this analysis. First, their results are based on a small sample of early career lawyers (684 men and 441 women), when attorneys are largely dependent on partners for work and business generation is generally not expected (see Wilkins and Gulati 1998; Galanter and Henderson Reference Galanter and Henderson2007). Second, assuming attorneys’ self-reported numbers are reliable and do not reflect gendered differences in tracking and reporting hours and origination (see Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009), what Azmat and Ferrer (Reference Azmat and Ferrer2017) describe as male attorneys’ superior work ethic may be viewed as evidence that male associates are afforded more opportunities to work with law firm “rainmakers.”

7. See also John Heinz and colleagues (2005, 172), who find a premium among lawyers of 36 percent for graduating in the top 10 percent or serving on a law review.

8. The authors have found that such research has been conducted on doctors’ incomes. See generally Andrea Evers and Monika Sieverding (Reference Evers and Sieverding2014, 101), who suggest that “[f]or women, however, gaining good grades did not seem to be sufficient for a successful career; the final grade at medical school made no difference at all to women’s later income.”

9. Lauren Rivera (Reference Rivera2012) describes, homophily—the tendency of individuals to gravitate to individuals similar to one’s self—as a function of cultural similarity and not necessarily racial and gender animus.

10. Catharine MacKinnon (Reference Mackinnon1987, 205) has noted: “What law school does for you is this: it tells you that to become a lawyer means to forget your feelings, forget your community, most of all, if you are a woman, forget your experience.”

11. Women inducted into the iron maiden role are stereotyped as tougher than they are (hence, the name) and trapped in a more militant stance than they might otherwise take (Kanter Reference Kanter1977, 984).

12. See Law School Survey of Student Engagement 2019, 10.

13. Legal services are often referred to as credence goods because their quality is judged in relation to the individuals or firms providing the services (Ribstein Reference Ribstein2004).

14. Swethaa Ballakrishnen, Priya Fielding-Singh, and Devon Magliozzi (Reference Ballakrishnen, Fielding-Singh and Magliozzi2019, 32–33) and Rosabeth Kanter (Reference Kanter1977, 974) suggest that women in male-dominated organizations prefer “social invisibility” and do not “make their achievements publicly known or to get credit for their own contributions to problem solving or other organizational tasks.”

15. See State Bar of Texas, Frequently Asked Questions, https://www.texasbar.com/Content/NavigationMenu/AboutUs/AboutUsFAQs/default.htm.

16. See State Bar of Texas, State Bar of Texas Membership: Attorney Statistical Profile (2015–2016), https://www.texasbar.com/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Demographic_and_Economic_Trends&Template=/CM/ContentDisplay.cfm&ContentID=32670.

17. Tax Government Code § 81.051.

18. Studies differ on whether male lawyers attend more prestigious law schools than female lawyers. See, for example, Deborah Merritt and Kyle McEntee (2019), who find that male law students attend more prestigious law schools than female law students based on 2016 and 2018 law school enrollment data; Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling (Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009) find that, among law students who graduated in 2000, male graduates were more likely to have attended law schools in the top forty than female law students. But see Kathleen Hull and Robert Nelson (2000, 259), who find no gender differences in law school prestige among Chicago lawyers;, and Karen Robson and Jean Wallace (2001, 86), who find no gender differences in law school prestige among Canadian lawyers. For a discussion of the effects of law school prestige on earnings, see generally Sander and Bambauer Reference Sander and Bambauer2012, 920 (“[l]aw school eliteness … is mostly a one-edged sword: coming from a very elite law school is undoubtedly helpful, other things being equal, but diminishing levels of eliteness have smaller and smaller effects”).

19. See State Bar of Texas, State Bar of Texas Membership.

20. For enrollment data, see American Bar Association, Statistics Archive: 2009–2013 Full-Time/Part-Time Total First Year Enrollment by Gender and Ethnicity, https://www.americanbar.org/groups/legal_education/resources/statistics/statistics-archives/.

21. For a discussion and analysis of the US News rankings’ impact on legal education, see Morriss and Henderson Reference Morriss and Henderson2008, 792–93.

22. Analyses available by request.

23. The survey was disseminated to approximately 94,150 active State Bar members for a response rate of nearly 13 percent, consistent with other large-scale surveys of lawyers. See, for example, Lawrence Krieger and Kennon Sheldon’s (2015) reporting response rate of 12.7 percent. To rule out the possibility of non-response bias, we used late responders as a proxy for non-responders and compared them to early responders (Armstrong and Overton Reference Armstrong and Overton1977). We found no significant demographic or income differences between the two groups, suggesting that our sample is representative of the active State Bar membership.

24. See State Bar of Texas, State Bar of Texas Membership.

25. In total, 89 percent of male lawyers in the total sample work full-time compared to 82 percent of female lawyers. This difference is significant (p < 0.05).

26. For example, a longitudinal study of graduates of Michigan law graduates reveals that 27 percent of female attorneys worked part-time to care for children compared to only 0.5 percent of men (Wood, Corcoran, and Courant Reference Wood, Corcoran and Courant1993). That a significant percentage of women partly or fully leave the legal profession to care for children means that female lawyers in general must strive to prove their commitment to practice (Wass and McNabb 2006, 293–94).

27. The US News and World Report rankings assign 12.5 percent of the ranking to median law school admission test (LSAT) score and 10 percent to median grade point average (GPA). While LSAT is more heavily weighted, there is greater variance in undergraduate GPAs so the optimal ranking-boosting strategy would be for a law school to maximize median GPA (Garfield Reference Garfield2013; Merritt and McEntee 2019).

28. Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling (Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009) note that the unexplained difference measures the effects of checking off male versus female and that this component is often used as a proxy for discrimination.

29. Previous studies have found that firm size is one of the main determinants of private practitioners’ incomes. See, for example, Dau-Schmidt and Mukhopadhaya Reference Dau-Schmidt and Mukhopadhaya1999; Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009.

30. “It is well documented that the returns to obtaining a college degree vary significantly across fields of study, with business and science majors earning a significant wage premium relative to all other fields” (Kinsler and Pavan Reference Kinsler and Pavan2015, 996).

31. Some older studies indicate that men outperform women in law school, but newer studies find that women slightly outperform men (Clydesdale Reference Clydesdale2004; Kay and Gorman Reference Kay and Gorman2008; Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009).

32. Because our dataset does not include information on law school attended, we cannot exclude the possibility that undergraduate GPA only affects earnings indirectly via its effect on law school admission. See also Sander and Bambauer Reference Sander and Bambauer2012 (finding that undergraduate GPA is not correlated with earnings after controlling for tier of law school).

33. Kenneth Dau-Schmidt and Kaushik Mukhopadhaya (1999) found strong negative effects on income for attorneys who worked in public interest, government, and education.

34. Dinovitzer, Reichman, and Sterling (Reference Dinovitzer, Reichman and Sterling2009) find that 75 percent of the gender pay gap remains unexplained, whereas John Hagan and Fiona Kay (1995) find that 61 percent is unaccounted for.

35. Milan Markovic and Gabriele Plickert (2018) discuss tradeoffs between higher incomes and more satisfying workplace settings.

36. The benefits to lawyers extend beyond the buttressing of social capital. As Harris Kim (Reference Kim2009, 81) writes, “[i]n this fiercely competitive professional environment [of law] with highly demanding consumers and ever-shifting clientele, having access to the right kinds of contacts who can provide valuable legal advice is absolutely crucial for survival, let alone success.”

37. Corporate clients, in particular, often seek lawyers with whom they identify because they expect them to serve as conduits: “If a corporation’s attorney were to offer independent advice to her client and try to ‘lean’ on the client to accept it … the result would be obvious and swift: the business would seek another attorney” (Mather Reference Mather2003, 1081).

38. Kay and Hagan (Reference Kay and Hagan1995, 741) note that “[f]irms may act to reproduce a practice culture … that requires women lawyers to model themselves on an exaggerated image of those who traditionally have been considered “suitable candidates for partnership.”

39. “[W]omen associates are required to embody standards that are an exaggerated form of a partnership ideal” (Kay and Hagan Reference Kay and Hagan1998, 741).

40. “Decisions made on the basis of subjective criteria are especially vulnerable to the influence of stereotypes and bias. The stereotypes that emerge boost men but operate as a drag on women in male-dominated workplaces” (Williams and Richardson Reference Williams and Richardson2010, 648).

41. Commentators tend to associate “eat what you kill” with large corporate law firms. However, the pressure to continually bring in business is often greater in small firms (Regan Reference Regan2004). Leslie Levin (Reference Levin2004, 323) and Carroll Seron (Reference Seron1996) also report on the financial insecurity among small-firm lawyers.

42. David Wilkins (Reference Wilkins2003, 1558) argues that “[c]orporate America does appear to have embraced arguments about the importance of diversity that have significant implications for the business of large law firms.”

43. Mulvaney Reference Mulvaney2019; Thomas Reference Thomas2020. In one particularly high-profile case, the head of the labor and employment group of Proskauer Rose LLP sued her colleagues for fifty million dollars. See Mandell and Rosenthal Reference Mandell and Rosenthal2018 .

44. For a critique of the business case for greater gender diversity, see McGlynn 2003, 166–71.

45. Elizabeth Gorman (Reference Gorman2005) shows that law firms with female hiring partners tend to hire more female entry-level candidates and that increasing the proportion of a firm’s partnership that is male decreases the likelihood that a female lawyer will be promoted to partner (Gorman Reference Gorman2006). But Rivera and Owens (Reference Rivera and Owens2021) observe that women in hiring positions are less likely to assign both the highest or lowest scores to female applicants.

46. As Nancy Levit (Reference Levit2011, 71) has observed, “[t]here is also good anecdotal evidence that potential lawsuits against firms are resolved nonpublicly through negotiated settlements. We’re lawyers-we invented confidentiality agreement.”

References

REFERENCES

Anker, Richard. 1997. “Theories of Occupational Segregation by Sex: An Overview.International Labour Review 136: 315–39.Google Scholar
Anleu, Sharyn L. Roach. 1992. “Recruitment Practice and Women Lawyers’ Employment: An Examination of In-House Legal Departments in the United States.” Sociology 26, no. 4: 651–72.Google Scholar
Antecol, Heather, Cobb-Clark, Deborah A., and Helland, Eric. 2014. “Bias in the Legal Profession: Self-Assessed versus Statistical Measures of Discrimination.Journal of Legal Studies 43, no. 2: 323–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arkes, Jeremy. 1999. “What Do Educational Credentials Signal and Why Do Employers Value Credentials?Economics of Education Review 18, no. 1: 133–41.10.1016/S0272-7757(98)00024-7CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Armstrong, J. Scott, and Overton, Terry S.. 1977. “Estimating Nonresponse Bias in Mail Surveys.Journal of Marketing Research 14, no. 3: 396402.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Azmat, Ghazala, and Ferrer, Rosa. 2017. “Gender Gaps in Performance: Evidence from Young Lawyers.Journal of Political Economy 125, no. 5: 1306–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Babcock, Linda, and Laschever, Sara. 2003. Women Don’t Ask: Negotiation and the Gender Divide. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.” CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ballakrishnen, Swethaa, Fielding-Singh, Priya, and Magliozzi, Devon. 2019. “Intentional Invisibility: Professional Women and the Navigation of Workplace Constraints.Sociological Perspectives 62, no. 1: 2341.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Becker, Gary S. 1964. Human Capital: A Theoretical and Empirical Analysis with Special Reference to Education. New York: National Bureau of Economic Research.Google Scholar
Becker, Gary S. 1985. “Human Capital, Effort, and the Sexual Division of Labor.Journal of Labor Economics 3, no. S1: 3358.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blinder, Alan S. 1973. “Wage Discrimination: Reduced form and Structural Estimates.Journal of Human Resources 8, no. 4: 436–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bolton, Sharon C., and Muzio, Daniel. 2007. “Can’t Live with’ Em; Can’t Live without’ Em: Gendered Segmentation in the Legal Profession.Sociology 41, no. 1: 4764.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Braithwaite, Joanne P. 2010. “The Strategic Use of Demand-side Diversity Pressure in the Solicitors’ Profession.Journal of Law and Society 37, no. 3: 442–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bureau of Labors Statistics. 2021. Labor Statistics from the Current Population Survey. January 22. https://www.bls.gov/cps/cpsaat11.htm.Google Scholar
Chiu, Charlotte, and Leicht, Kevin T.. 1999. “When Does Feminization Increase Equality: The Case of Lawyers.Law & Society Review 33, no. 3: 557–93.10.2307/3115104CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clydesdale, Timothy T. 2004. “A Forked River Runs through Law School: Toward Understanding Race, Gender, Age, and Related Gaps in Law School Performance and Bar Passage.Law & Social Inquiry 29, no. 4: 711–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collins, Todd A., Dumas, Tao L., and Moyer, Laura P.. 2017. “Intersecting Disadvantages: Race, Gender, and Age Discrimination among Attorneys.Social Science Quarterly 98, no. 5: 1642–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corcoran, Mary E., and Courant, Paul N.. 1985. “Sex Role Socialization and Labor Market Outcomes.American Economic Review 75, no. 2: 275–78.Google Scholar
Cuddy, Amy J. C., Fiske, Susan T., and Glick, Peter. 2008. “Warmth and Competence As Universal Dimensions of Social Perception: The Stereotype Content Model and the BIAS Map.Advances in Experimental Social Psychology 40: 61149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dau-Schmidt, Kenneth G., and Mukhopadhaya, Kaushik. 1999. “The Fruits of Our Labors: An Empirical Study of the Distribution of Income and Job Satisfaction across the Legal Profession.Journal of Legal Education 49, no. 3: 342–66.Google Scholar
Davis, Anthony E. 2008. “Legal Ethics and Risk Management: Complementary Visions of Lawyer Regulation.Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics 21: 95131.Google Scholar
Donn, Barbara, Cahill, Christine, and Mihal, Meghan H.. 2015. “Examining Pay Differentials in the Legal Field.Indiana Journal of Law and Social Equality 3: 216–32.Google Scholar
Dinovitzer, Ronit, Reichman, Nancy J., and Sterling, Joyce S.. 2009. “The Differential Valuation of Women’s Work: A New Look at the Gender Gap in Lawyers’ Incomes.Social Forces 88, no. 2: 819–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dixon, Jo, and Seron, Carroll. 1995. “Stratification in the Legal Profession: Sex, Sector, and Salary.Law & Society Review 29, no. 3: 381412.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donovan, Kathleen. 1990. “Women Associates’ Advancement to Partner Status in Private Law Firms.Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics 4: 135–52.Google Scholar
England, Paula. 2005. “Gender Inequality in Labor Markets: The Role of Motherhood and Segregation.Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society 12, no. 2: 264–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
England, Paula, Farkas, George, Stanek Kilbourne, Barbara, and Dou, Thomas. 1988. “Explaining Occupational Sex Segregation and Wages: Findings from a Model with Fixed Effects.American Sociological Review 53, no. 4: 544–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Epstein, Cynthia Fuchs. 1993. Women in Law. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.Google Scholar
Epstein, Cynthia Fuchs, Saute, Robert, Oglensky, Bonnie, and Gever, Martha. 1995. “Glass Ceilings and Open Doors: Women’s Advancement in the Legal Profession.Fordham Law Review 64, no. 2: 291449.Google Scholar
Evers, Andrea, and Sieverding, Monika. 2014. “Why Do Highly Qualified Women Still Earn Less? Gender Differences in Long-Term Predictors of Career Success.Psychology of Women Quarterly 38, no. 1: 93106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fiske, Susan T., Cuddy, Amy J. C., Glick, Peter, and Xu, Jun. 2002. “A Model of Often Mixed. Stereotype Content: Competence and Warmth Respectively Follow from Perceived Status and Competition.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 82, no. 6: 878902.10.1037/0022-3514.82.6.878CrossRefGoogle Scholar
French, Michael T., Homer, Jenny F., Popovici, Ioana, and Robins, Philip K.. 2015. “What You Do in High School Matters: High School GPA, Educational Attainment, and Labor Market Earnings As a Young Adult.Eastern Economic Journal 41, no. 3: 370–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
French, Steve. 1999. “Of Problems, Pitfalls and Possibilities: A Comprehensive Look at Female Attorneys and Law Firm Partnership.Women’s Rights Law Reporter 21: 189216.Google Scholar
Galanter, Marc, and Henderson, William D.. 2007. “The Elastic Tournament: A Second Transformation of the Big Law Firm.Stanford Law Review 60: 18671929.Google Scholar
Galanter, Marc, and Palay, Thomas. 1994. Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Garfield, Leslie Yalof. 2013. “The Inevitable Irrelevance of Affirmative Action Jurisprudence.Journal of College and University Law 39: 151.Google Scholar
Garth, Bryant G., and Sterling, Joyce S.. 2018. “Diversity, Hierarchy, and Fit in Legal Careers: Insights from Fifteen Years of Qualitative Interviews.Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics 31: 123–74.Google Scholar
Goldin, Claudia, and Polachek, Solomon. 1987. “Residual Differences by Sex: Perspectives on the Gender Gap in Earnings.American Economic Review 77, no. 2: 143–51.Google Scholar
González, Carmen. 2014. “Women of Color in Legal Education: Challenging the Presumption of Incompetence.The Federal Lawyer 61: 4851.Google Scholar
Gorman, Elizabeth H. 2005. “Gender Stereotypes, Same-Gender Preferences, and Organizational Variation in the Hiring of Women: Evidence from Law Firms.American Sociological Review 70, no. 4: 702–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gorman, Elizabeth H. 2006. “Work Uncertainty and the Promotion of Professional Women: The Case of Law Firm Partnership.Social Forces 85, no. 2: 865–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guinier, Lani. 1997. Becoming Gentlemen: Women, Law School, and Institutional Change. Boston: Beacon Press.Google Scholar
Hagan, John. 1990. “The Gender Stratification of Income Inequality among Lawyers.Social Forces 68, no. 3: 835–55.10.2307/2579356CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hagan, John, and Kay, Fiona. 1995. Gender in Practice: A Study of Lawyers’ Lives. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hall, Peggy Kubicz. 2012. “I’ve Looked at Fees from Both Sides Now: A Perspective on Market-Valued Pricing for Legal Services.William Mitchell Law Review 39: 154226.Google Scholar
Heilman, Madeline E., Wallen, Aaron S., Fuchs, Daniella, and Tamkins, Melinda M.. 2004. “Penalties for Success: Reactions to Women Who Succeed at Male Gender-Typed Tasks.Journal of Applied Psychology 89, no. 3: 416–27.10.1037/0021-9010.89.3.416CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Heinz, John P., Nelson, Robert L., Sandefur, Rebecca L., and Laumann, Edward O.. 2005. Urban Lawyers: The New Social Structure of the Bar. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Hull, Kathleen E., and Nelson, Robert L.. 2000. “Assimilation, Choice, or Constraint? Testing Theories of Gender Differences in the Careers of Lawyers.Social Forces 79, no. 1: 229–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
International Bar Association. 2019. Us Too? Bullying and Harassment in the Legal Profession 98. London: International Bar Association. https://www.ibanet.org/Bullying-and-sexual-harassment.aspx.Google Scholar
Jones, Ethel B., and Jackson, John D.. 1990. “College Grades and Labor Market Rewards.Journal of Human Resources 25, no. 2: 253–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kang, Jerry, and Banaji, Mahzarin R.. 2006. “Fair Measures: A Behavioral Realist Revision of Affirmative Action.California Law Review 94: 10631118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kanter, Rosabeth Moss. 1977. “Some Effects of Proportions on Group Life: Skewed Sex Ratios and Responses to Token Women.American Journal of Sociology 82, no. 965: 973–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kay, Fiona M. 2018. “Social Capital, Relational Inequality Theory, and Earnings of Racial Minority Lawyers.” In Race, Identity and Work, edited by Ethel, L. Mickey and Adia Harvey Wingfield, 6390. Bingley, UK: Emerald Publishing.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kay, Fiona M., Alarie, Stacey L., and Adjei, Jones K.. 2016. “Undermining Gender Equality: Female Attrition from Private Law Practice.Law & Society Review 50, no. 3: 766801.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kay, Fiona M., and Gorman, Elizabeth. 2008. “Women in the Legal Profession.Annual Review of Law and Social Science 4: 299332.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kay, Fiona M., and Hagan, John. 1995. “The Persistent Glass Ceiling: Gendered Inequalities in the Earnings of Lawyers.British Journal of Sociology 46, no. 2: 279310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kay, Fiona M., and Hagan, John. 1998. “Raising the Bar: the Gender Stratification of Law-Firm Capital.American Sociological Review 1: 728–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kay, Fiona M., and Wallace, Jean E.. 2009. “Mentors As Social Capital: Gender, Mentors, and Career Rewards in Law Practice.Sociological Inquiry 79, no. 4: 418–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, Harris H. 2009. “Networks, Information Transfer, and Status Conferral: The Role of Social Capital in Income Stratification among Lawyers.Sociological Quarterly 50, no. 1: 6187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kinsler, Josh, and Pavan, Ronni. 2015. “The Specificity of General Human Capital: Evidence from College Major Choice.Journal of Labor Economics 33, no. 4: 933–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krieger, Lawrence S., and Sheldon, Kennon M.. 2015. “What Makes Lawyers Happy: A Data-Driven Prescription to Redefine Professional Success.George Washington Law Review 83: 554627.Google Scholar
Law School Survey of Student Engagement. 2019. The Cost of Women’s Success. Bloomington, IN: Law School Survey of Student Engagement. https://lssse.indiana.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/LSSSE-AnnualSurvey-Gender-Final.pdf.Google Scholar
Lee, Katrina. 2021. “Discrimination As Anti-Ethical: Achieving Systemic Change in Large Law Firms.Denver Law Review 98: 581627.Google Scholar
Levin, Leslie C. 2004. “The Ethical World of Solo and Small Law Firm Practitioners.Houston Law Review 41: 309–92Google Scholar
Levit, Nancy. 2011. “Lawyers Suing Law Firms: The Limits on Attorney Employment Discrimination Claims and the Prospects For Creating Happy Lawyers.University of Pittsburgh Law Review 73: 65106.10.5195/lawreview.2011.174CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mackinnon, Catharine A. 1987. “On Collaboration.” In Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law, 198–205. Boston, Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Mandell, Meredith and Rosenthal, Hilary. 2018. “Proskauer, Law Firm Known for Handling High-Profile Sex Harassment Cases, Is Accused Itself.” NBC News, May 15. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/proskauer-law-firm-known-handling-high-profile-sex-harassment-cases-n874411.Google Scholar
Manning, Alan, and Swaffield, Joanna. 2008. “The Gender Gap in Early-Career Wage Growth.Economic Journal 118, no. 530: 9831024.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Markovic, Milan, and Plickert, Gabriele. 2018. “Attorneys’ Career Dissatisfaction in the New Normal.International Journal of the Legal Profession 25, no. 2: 147–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Markovic, Milan, and Plickert, Gabriele. 2019. “The Paradox of Minority Attorney Satisfaction.International Review of Law and Economics 60, no. 105859: 212.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mather, Lynn. 2003. “What Do Clients Want; What Do Lawyers Do.Emory Law Journal 52: 1065–86.Google Scholar
Mcglynn, Clare. 2003. “Strategies for Reforming the English Solicitors.” In Schultz and Shaw, Women in the World’s Legal Professions, 159–74.Google Scholar
Menkel-Meadow, Carrie. 1986. “The Comparative Sociology of Women Lawyers: The ‘Feminization’ of the Legal Profession.Osgoode Hall Law Journal 24: 897900.Google Scholar
Menkel-Meadow, Carrie. 1987. “Excluded Voices: New Voices in the Legal Profession Making New Voices in the Law.University of Miami Law Review 42: 2953.Google Scholar
Deborah Jones, Merritt, and Mcentee, Kyle P.. 2019. “Gender Equity in Law School Enrollment: An Elusive Goal.Journal of Legal Education 69, no. 1: 102–15.Google Scholar
Miller, Shazia Rafiullah. 1998. “Shortcut: High School Grades As a Signal of Human Capital.Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis 20, no. 4: 299311.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morriss, Andrew P., and Henderson, William D.. 2008. “Measuring Outcomes: Post-Graduation Measures of Success in the US News & and World Report Law School Rankings.Indiana Law Journal 83: 791834.Google Scholar
Mossman, Mary Jane. 2003. “Engendering the Legal Profession: The Education Strategy.” In Schultz and Shaw, Women in the World’s Legal Professions, 77–86.Google Scholar
Mulvaney, Erin. 2019. “Law Firm Bias Cases Hinge on Meaning of Partner.” Bloomberg News, April 26. https://news.bloomberglaw.com/daily-labor-report/law-firm-bias-cases-hinge-on-meaning-of-partner.Google Scholar
Noonan, Mary C, Corcoran, Mary E., and Courant, Paul N.. 2005. “Pay Differences among the Highly Trained: Cohort Difference in the Male-Female Earnings Gap in Lawyers’ Salaries.Social Forces 84, no. 2: 853–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oaxaca, Ronald. 1973. “Male-Female Wage Differentials in Urban Labor Markets.International Economic Review 14, no. 3: 693709.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pearce, Russell G., Wald, Eli, and Ballakrishnen, Swethaa S.. 2015. “Difference Blindness vs. Bias Awareness: Why Law Firms with the Best of Intentions Have Failed to Create Diverse Partnerships.Fordham Law Review 83: 2407–55.Google Scholar
Phelan, Julie E., Moss-Racusin, Corinne A., and Rudman, Laurie A.. 2008. “Competent Yet Out in the Cold: Shifting Criteria for Hiring Reflect Backlash toward Agentic Women.Psychology of Women Quarterly 32, no. 4: 406–13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piopiunik, Marc, Schwerdt, Guido, Simon, Lisa, and Woessmann, Ludger. 2020. “Skills, Signals, and Employability: An Experimental Investigation.European Economic Review 123, no. 103374: 224.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Polachek, Soloman William. 1979. “Occupational Segregation among Women: Theory, Evidence, and a Prognosis.” In Women in the Labor Market, edited by Cynthia, B. Lloyd, Emily, S. Andrews, and Curtis, L. Gilroy, 137–57. New York: Columbia University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quadlin, Natasha. 2018. “The Mark of a Woman’s Record: Gender and Academic Performance in Hiring.American Sociological Review 83, no. 2: 331–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Regan, Milton C. 2004. Eat What You Kill: The Fall of a Wall Street Lawyer. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Regan, Milton C., and Rohrer, Lisa H.. 2012. “Money and Meaning: The Moral Economy of Law Firm Compensation.University of St. Thomas Law Journal 10: 74151.Google Scholar
Reichman, Nancy J., and Sterling, Joyce S.. 2004. “Sticky Floors, Broken Steps, and Concrete Ceilings in Legal Careers.Texas Journal of Women and the Law 14: 2780.Google Scholar
Reichman, Nancy J., and Sterling, Joyce S.. 2013. “Parenthood Status and Compensation in Law Practice.Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 20, no. 2: 1203–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rhode, Deborah L. 2013. Lawyers As Leaders. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ribstein, Larry E. 2004. “Lawyers As Lawmakers: A Theory of Lawyer Licensing.Missouri Law Review 69: 299362.Google Scholar
Ridgeway, Cecilia L. 1997. “Interaction and the Conservation of Gender Inequality: Considering Employment.American Sociological Review 62: 218–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rivera, Lauren A. 2011. “Ivies, Extracurriculars, and Exclusion: Elite Employers’ Use of Educational Credentials.Research in Social Stratification and Mobility 29, no. 1: 7190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rivera, Lauren A. 2012. “Hiring As Cultural Matching: The Case of Elite Professional Service Firms.American Sociological Review 77, no. 6: 9991022.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rivera, Lauren A., and Owens, Jayanti. 2021. “Glass Floors and Glass Ceilings: Sex Homophily and Heterophily in Job Interviews.Social Forces 99, no. 4: 1363–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robson, Karen, and Wallace, Jean E.. 2001. “Gendered Inequalities in Earnings: A Study of Canadian Lawyers.Canadian Review of Sociology 38, no. 1: 7595.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ryan, Christopher J., and Dawe, Meghan. 2021. “Mind the Gap: Gender Pay Disparities in the Legal Academy.Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics 34, no. 3: 567612.Google Scholar
Sander, Richard, and Bambauer, Jane. 2012. “The Secret of My Success: How Status, Eliteness, and School Performance Shape Legal Careers.Journal of Empirical Legal Studies 9, no. 4: 893930.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schleef, Debra. 2001. “Thinking Like a Lawyer: Gender Differences in the Production of Professional Knowledge.Gender Issues 19, no. 2: 6986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schultz, Theodore W. 1961. “Investment in Human Capital.American Economic Review 51, no. 1: 117.Google Scholar
Schultz, Ulrike, and Shaw, Gisela, eds. Women in the World’s Legal Professions. Oxford: Hart Publishing.Google Scholar
Seron, Carroll. 1996. The Business of Practicing Law: The Work Lives of Solo and Small-Firm Attorneys. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.Google Scholar
Sterling, Joyce S., and Reichman, Nancy. 2016. “Overlooked and Undervalued: Women in Private Law Practice.Annual Review of Law and Social Science 12: 373–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sommerlad, Hilary. 2003. “Can Women Lawyer Differently? A Perspective from the UK.” In Schultz and Shaw, Women in the World’s Legal Professions, 191–223.Google Scholar
Thaxton, Sherod. 2018. “Disentangling Disparity: Exploring Racially Disparate Effect and Treatment in Capital Charging.American Journal of Criminal Law 45: 95166.Google Scholar
Thomas, David. 2020. “Ex-Jones Day Associates Blast Bid for Sanctions in Gender Bias Lawsuit.” Law.com, January 8. https://www.law.com/americanlawyer/2020/01/08/ex-jones-day-associates-blast-bid-for-sanctions-in-gender-bias-lawsuit/.Google Scholar
Uhlmann, Eric Luis, and Cohen, Geoffrey L.. 2005. “Constructed Criteria: Redefining Merit to Justify Discrimination.Psychological Science 16, no. 6: 474–80.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wald, Eli. 2009. “Glass Ceilings and Dead Ends: Professional Ideologies: Gender Stereotypes, and the Future of Women Lawyers at Large Law Firms.Fordham Law Review 78: 2245–88.Google Scholar
Wass, Victoria, and Mcnabb, Robert. 2006. “Pay, Promotion and Parenthood amongst Women Solicitors.Work, Employment and Society 20, no. 2: 289308.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weiss, Debra Cassens. 2020. “Biglaw Firm Switches from Strict Lockstep Compensation for Partners to Modified System.” American Bar Association Journal, September 11. https://www.abajournal.com/news/article/biglaw-firm-switches-from-strict-lockstep-compensation-for-partners-to-modified-system.Google Scholar
Williams, Joan C., and Richardson, Veta. 2010. “New Millennium, Same Glass Ceiling: The Impact of Law Firm Compensation Systems on Women.Hastings Law Journal 62: 597676.Google Scholar
Wilkins, David B. 2003. “From Separate Is Inherently Unequal to Diversity Is Good for Business: The Rise of Market-Based Diversity Arguments and the Fate of the Black Corporate Bar.Harvard Law Review 117: 15481615.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilkins, David B., and Mitu Gulati, G.. 1998. “Reconceiving the Tournament of Lawyers: Tracking, Seeding, and Information Control in the Internal Labor Markets of Elite Law Firms.Virginia Law Review 84 no. 8: 15811681.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wise, David A. 1975. “Academic Achievement and Job Performance.American Economic Review 65, no. 3: 350–66.Google Scholar
Wood, Robert G., Corcoran, Mary E., and Courant, Paul N.. 1993. “Pay Differences among the Highly Paid: The Male-Female Earnings Gap in Lawyers’ Salaries.Journal of Labor Economics 11, no. 3: 417–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wongsurawat, Winai. 2009. “Does Grade Inflation Affect the Credibility of Grades? Evidence from US Law School Admissions.Education Economics 17, no. 4: 523–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zagorsky, Jay L., and Lupica, Lois R.. 2008. “A Study of Consumers’ Post-Discharge Finances: Struggle, Stasis, or Fresh Start.American Bankruptcy Institute Law Review 16: 283319.Google Scholar
Figure 0

TABLE 1. Descriptive statistics of study variables (with t-tests)

Figure 1

TABLE 2. Regression decomposition coefficients and percentage of the gender income gap explained with alternate models, including selected controls

Figure 2

TABLE 3. Regression decomposition coefficients and percentage of the gender income gap explained with alternate models, including selected controls for private practitioners

Figure 3

TABLE 4. Predictors of earnings (full-time attorneys)

Figure 4

TABLE 5. Predicting income by gender and achievement (full-time attorneys)

Figure 5

FIGURE 1. Comparison of high-achieving female lawyers’ incomes by occupation.

Figure 6

TABLE 6. Predicting income by gender and achievement among full-time private practitioners

Figure 7

FIGURE 2. Comparison of high-achieving female private practitioners’ incomes by role.Notes: * Income differentials estimated from Model 4 in Table 5.