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The Gavel Gap: Who Sits in Judgement on State Courts, ACSLP, 2016

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The

Gavel gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON

STATE COURTS?

BY

TRACEY E. GEORGE

AND

ALBERT H. YOON

1|

SUMMARY

2|

BACKGROUND

3|

R E S U LT S

4|

CONCLUSION

5|

AT T R I B U T I O N & A C K N O W L E D G E M E N T S

6|

APPENDIX

“For most individuals and organizations, state courts
are the “law” for all effective purposes.”
For most individuals and organizations, state courts are the
“law” for all effective purposes. State courts are America’s
courts. But, we know surprisingly little about who serves
on state courts—i.e., state judges—despite their central and
powerful role. This lack of information is especially significant
because judges’ backgrounds have important implications
for the work of courts. The characteristics of those who sit
in judgment can affect the internal workings of courts as
well as the external perception of courts and judges. The
background of judges can influence how they make decisions
and impact the public’s acceptance of those decisions. We
need to know more about state judges.
In order to address this serious shortcoming in our
understanding of America’s courts, we have constructed an
unprecedented database of state judicial biographies. Our
dataset—the State Bench Database—includes more than
10,000 current sitting judges on state courts of general
jurisdiction. Although state judges are public servants, little is
known about them. Unlike their counterparts on the federal
courts, much of the information is non-public, and in many
instances, not even collected in a systematic way.

Using the State Bench Database, we examine the gender,
racial, and ethnic composition of state courts. We then
compare the composition of state courts to the composition
of the general population in each state. We find that courts
are not representative of the people whom they serve—that
is, a gap exists between the bench and the citizens. We call
this gap the Gavel Gap.
This study’s principal findings are:
Women have entered law schools and the legal profession
in large numbers for the last forty years, but are
underrepresented on state courts. Women comprise roughly
one-half of the U.S. population and one-half of American law
students. But, less than one-third of state judges are women.
In some states, women are underrepresented on the bench
by a ratio of one woman on the bench for every four women
in the state. Not a single state has as many women judges as
it does men.

“Although state judges are public servants, little is
known about them.”
The

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

2

“We find that courts are not representative of the
people whom they serve—that is, a gap exists between
the bench and the citizens.”
People of color make up roughly four in ten people in the
country but fewer than two in ten judges; and, in sixteen states,
judges of color account for fewer than one in ten state judges.
The story of racial diversity in state courts is one of sharp
contrasts. In the five states with the best representation,
minorities are represented at roughly the same rate on state
courts as they are in the general population (and in a few
states, they are even better represented). But, in the five
states with the worst representation, minorities appear to be
nearly absent from the judiciary.
This study is based on the work of a team of independent
researchers at Vanderbilt University and the University of
Toronto. With support from the American Constitution
Society, the researchers collected and coded biographical
data on over 10,000 judges serving on state supreme courts,
state intermediate appellate courts, and state general

jurisdiction trial courts. A complete explanation of this
study’s methodology is below.
The findings from this study have several important
implications. First, they should inform the current method of
identifying and selecting judges. Second, they demonstrate
that we need a better process for developing a pipeline of
women and minorities to serve as judges.
Our courts must be representative in order to fulfill their
purposes. Our laws are premised in part on the idea that
our courts will be staffed by judges who can understand the
circumstances of the communities which they serve. Our judicial
system depends on the general public’s faith in its legitimacy.
Both of these foundational principles require a bench that is
representative of the people whom the courts serve.

“State courts handle more than 90% of the judicial
business in America.”
BACKGROUND
STATE COURTS AS AMERICA’S COURTS
The United States Supreme Court is undoubtedly the most
visible and well-known court in America. Its decisions,
including Brown v. Board of Education, Roe v. Wade, and
Obergefell v. Hodges, have had a tremendous impact on
the civil rights and liberties of all Americans. But the U.S.
Supreme Court’s reach is limited. The Supreme Court decides
fewer than 100 cases per year. Moreover, it addresses only
questions of federal law. While we often hear a person say
that she will take her case “all the way to the Supreme Court,”
the reality is that the justices decide few cases and only a
subset of legal issues. Accordingly, in nearly every case and
for any legal issue, when we think of judges making these
decisions in America, we are usually thinking of state judges.
Americans are primarily concerned with matters such
as finances, family, health, and safety. State courts have
The

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

authority over these basic matters of daily life. If a tenant
refuses to pay rent and her landlord threatens to evict her,
a state court would hear the dispute. If divorced parents
fight over the custody of a child, a state court will resolve
the matter. If a car accident leaves a passenger badly injured,
the victim will likely go to state court to seek recovery. If
a suspect is arrested for assault, a state judge will hold the
arraignment and eventually preside over the trial (or more
likely take the plea bargain). The work of courts in America is
the work of state courts.
What cases do state courts hear?
State courts handle more than 90% of the judicial business
in America. According to the Court Statistics Project, a
joint effort of the National Center for State Courts and the
Conference of State Court Administrators, approximately
94 million cases were brought in American state trial courts
in 2013.1 In a single year, nearly one case was filed for every
three people in the United States. Roughly one billion cases
entered the state judicial system over the past decade.

3

“The most significant part of state court dockets is
comprised of criminal prosecutions and civil actions.”
State courts are open to the full range of disputes that
arise in this country. State judicial systems are courts of
“general jurisdiction” which means they can hear questions
of state and federal law. By contrast, federal courts are
courts of “limited” jurisdiction which means that they
can only hear subjects assigned to them by the U.S.
Constitution or federal statute.
The single largest category of state court cases is traffic
violations, making up more than half of the courts’ caseloads.
Traffic violations are in many ways minor matters, requiring
limited time and relatively few court resources. Nevertheless,
they can have meaningful implications for individuals who
face the possibility of fines and loss of their right to drive.
Family law and juvenile matters, both of which have obvious
and profound effects on those involved, make up the smallest
part of state court dockets. Traffic, domestic, and juvenile
cases are usually heard by specialized courts, which hear only
those types of cases.
The most significant part of state court dockets is comprised
of criminal prosecutions and civil actions. Together, civil and
criminal cases account for nearly all non-traffic cases in state
court. Civil and criminal litigation also are more likely to have
effects beyond the parties to the case. Judicial decisions
in civil and criminal cases interpret law, create precedent,
and even make law. Civil lawsuits involve the distribution of
resources and recognition of rights that can have both direct
and indirect effects throughout the economy and society.
Criminal prosecutions bring the power of the state to bear on
individuals, acknowledge serious harms suffered by victims,
punish wrongdoers, and deter future criminal behavior.

Figure 1. Total Incoming Cases in State Courts, 2013
(Court Statistics Project, National Center for State Courts)

Criminal
21%
Civil
18%

Gavel

Juvenile 1%

gap

State judicial systems handle review of lower courts in a
number of ways. Two general features are common. First,
every state has at least one appellate court of last resort—the
final word on state law—which we will call a “supreme court”
for ease of reference. Two states—Oklahoma and Texas—have
two such courts, one for civil appeals and one for criminal
appeals. Second, 42 states, like the federal courts, have
an intermediate appellate court situated between general
jurisdiction trial courts and the high court(s). An intermediate
appellate court enables the state supreme court to hear
fewer cases and to choose which cases to review.

Figure 2. State Court Structures
Final judicial
authority
on state law

Supreme Court(s)

Family 6%

Traffic
54%

The

How do state courts handle their cases?
Each state judicial system is unique, yet certain patterns
emerge. All states have a trial level and at least one appellate
level. Trial courts include any court that handles cases when
they are first filed. An appellate court reviews decisions of
lower courts. Forty-five states have more than one type of
trial court (a “divided” trial court structure): a trial court of
general jurisdiction and one or more trial courts of limited
jurisdiction. Specialized entry-level courts include family
courts, juvenile courts, municipal courts, small claims courts,
traffic courts, and other courts whose authority is similarly
limited to a defined, narrow subject area. In those states, trial
courts of general jurisdiction handle civil lawsuits (usually
above a minimum-dollar amount threshold) and criminal
prosecutions for felonies or other serious crimes. Five states
use a single (or “unified”) trial court to handle all matters,
although unified court systems may handle the work through
divisional sittings, which hear particular types of claims.

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

Hears most appeals
from trial courts
(may be specialized)

Trial courts
(either single set or
divided into general
and specialized)

Intermediate
Appellate
Court(s)

Unified
(3)

Divided
(38)

None (10)

Unified
(3)

Divided
(7)

4

STATE JUDGES AS AMERICA’S JUDGES
State trial and appellate judges do the work of America’s
courts. Thus, it is important to understand the process by
which states choose the people who will resolve disputes,
enforce law, and make law on our behalf. Any process of
selection will inevitably have an impact on who is selected.
Each state has a distinct selection process for its judicial
system. By focusing on the most salient features of those
selection systems, however, the states can be grouped into
helpful categories.
A state judge may first gain a seat through election
(nonpartisan or partisan), appointment by an elected branch
(governor and/or legislature), or recommendation by a merit
commission. Most states (43) and the District of Columbia
use the same method for selecting trial judges and appellate
judges. All but two states use the same method for all

appellate judges. The majority of states use elections to staff
their trial courts. By contrast, the majority of state appellate
courts are filled using some type of appointment process,
which can involve a merit commission controlling the slate
of nominees or allow the appointing body (either or both
elected branches) to select anyone whom they choose.
As reflected in the maps, the American heartland favors
choosing judges through a merit process, while the North and
the South generally favor election, either partisan or nonpartisan.2 The Northeast and the West lack a clear pattern of
selection. The key distinction between merit selection and
election is citizen participation. The merit process usually
requires that the governor, with or without consent of a
legislature, pick from a panel of nominees. Election may
require party nomination before a vote in a general election.

Figure 3. Selection Method By Court Level
24
20
17

17

Elected
Branches

16

Merit
Selection

13
8

6

4

trial court

The

Gavel

gap

5

intermediate
appellate courts

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

6

5

Nonpartisan
Election
Partisan
Election

supreme court

5

Figure 3. Selection Method By Court Level

Elected
Branches
Merit
Selection
Nonpartisan
Election
Partisan
Election

Figure 5. Method of Selecting State Appellate Court Judges

Elected
Branches
Merit
Selection
Nonpartisan
Election
Partisan
Election

The

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

6

“More than half of state trial judges and state
appellate judges are white men according to
the State Bench Database figures.”
RESULTS
State courts are America’s courts. State judges are powerful
public officials. But, we know surprisingly little about the men
and women who serve as state judges. Few states release
detailed biographical information about their judges. Existing
non-government sources generally rely on incomplete or
unreliable information. We seek to remedy this shortcoming
through the construction of the State Bench Database.
We collected biographical data for every judge sitting on
a state appellate court or a state trial court of general
jurisdiction as of December 2014. When constructing
our dataset, we used only sources that had the hallmarks
of credibility and reliability. The sources included state
government webpages, press releases, and printed
directories; professional association, practitioner, and
university publications; academic journals; newspapers;
judges’ official campaign websites; judicial directories; and
confidential telephone interviews with judges and lawyers.

Figure 6. Race & Gender on
State Trial Courts
Women of
Color 8%

White
Men
57%

Men of Color
9%

Gavel

More than half of state trial judges and state appellate
judges are white men according to the State Bench Database
figures. We compare our estimates to the U.S. Census
Bureau estimates of the representation of all four groups
in the U.S. population in 2014.3 Women of color are the
most underrepresented group (only 40% of their relative
numbers in the general population) while white men are
overrepresented (nearly double their relative numbers).

Figure 7. Race & Gender on
State Appellate Courts

Figure 8. Race & Gender in
the United States

Women of
Color 8%

White
Women
26%

The

A note about our calculation on the numbers of women and
minorities on the bench. First, our figures are estimates. We
are not directly observing these characteristics of the judges
but rather collecting it from secondary sources. Second,
even after exhausting available sources, we are missing race
and ethnicity data on roughly five percent of the judges. We
were able to identify gender for nearly all of the judges in the
database. Our estimates are based on available data. Third,
the database includes only judges who were listed as serving
on the court in December 2014. If a state experienced
significant turnover in its composition of judges in the
interim, our figures may contrast with the state’s current
judicial composition.

gap

White
Women
22%

White
Men
58%

Women
of Color
20%
White
Women
31%

White
Men
30%
Men of
Color
19%

Men of Color
12%
WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

7

REPRESENTATIVENESS OF STATE
JUDICIARIES
For every state, we calculated the gap between the
representation of women or minorities on the bench and the
representation of each group in the general population. A
truly representative judiciary would have the same ratio of
women and minorities on the bench as it does in the general
population. The Gavel Gap is how much the state falls short of
that forecast.
We calculate the Gavel Gap by dividing the difference between
the proportion of women and/or minorities on the bench
and women and/or minorities in the general population by
the proportion of women and/or minorities in the general
population. The formula for the Gender Gavel Gap is ((fraction
of judges who are women – fraction of general population
who are women) ÷ fraction of general population who are
women). Thus, if half of a state’s judges were women and half
of its general population were women, the state would have no

Figure 9. Gender Representativeness of State Courts

Number of States

30

27

25
20

15

15
10

5

5
0

4
0

F

D

C

B

A

The very low gender representativeness scores demonstrate
that the steady gender balance in law schools has yet to
translate to equality on state courts. Women have been
attending law school in large numbers for the past forty
years. In 1985, the percentage of first year law students
who were women crossed the 40% threshold and has been
around 50% since 1996. Nevertheless, not a single state has
women on the bench in the numbers commensurate with their
representation in the general population. In most states, men
are overrepresented by a factor of two to one. That is, for
nearly half of the states, women comprise fewer than one-

The

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

gap ((.50-.50)/.50=0). If ten percent of a state’s judges were
women and half of its general population were women, the
state would have a gap of -.80 ((.10-.50)/.50=-.80). That is, the
state has 80% fewer women on the bench than we would have
predicted based on its general population. Stated differently,
the state has only 20% of the number of women on the bench
as we would expect.
The representativeness score is a positive presentation
of where a state stands on achieving the proportion of
women and/or minorities on the bench as it has in its
general population. We rank each state based on the level of
representation that it appears to have achieved based on the
State Bench Database estimates.
We grade a state as follows:
•	 A if the state is close to parity (at least 90%),
•	 B for states that have achieved 80 to 89%,
•	 C for states that have achieved 70 to 79%,
•	 D for states that have achieved 60 to 69%, and
•	 F for states that are below 60%.

“The very low gender
representativeness scores
demonstrate that the
steady gender balance in
law schools has yet to
translate to equality on
state courts.”
half of the forecasted number of state judges. For example,
Mississippi has a majority female population, but less than 18%
of its state judges are women. Gender representativeness
scores for individual states are reported in our Appendix.
New England states generally exhibited higher proportional
representation than elsewhere, although individual states in
other regions – e.g., Nevada, where women comprise 50% of
the general population and 41% of state judges, and Oregon,
where women comprise 51% of the general population and
44% of state judges – ranked relatively high.

8

“Not a single state has women on the bench in the
numbers commensurate with their representation
in the general population.”
The racial and ethnic representativeness of state courts data
reveals a flatter distribution for ethnic representation on
state courts. In a near majority of states (24), minority judges
fell below 50% of proportional representation of the general
population. Many of the states which fared poorly on the
gender score also performed poorly on ethnic representation.
For example, Oklahoma ranked 41st out of 51 on the gender
score (with 50% female population but only 21% women
judges), and 46th out of 51 on the race and ethnic minority
representation score (with 33% minority population but only
8% minority judges).

The general representativeness of state courts is reflected in
an overall Gavel Gap index which considers the representation
of both women and minorities on state courts. Two small
jurisdictions—Hawaii (ranked 1st) and the District of Columbia
(2nd)—lead the group. Twenty-six states earn failing scores.

“In a near majority of states (24), minority judges fell
below 50% of proportional representation of the
general population.”

Figure 10. Racial and Ethnic
Representativeness of State Courts

35

Figure 11. Overall Representativeness
of State Courts

30

32

25

25

Number of States

Number of States

30

20
15
10

6

5
0

The

Gavel

26

7

5

gap

D

C

B

15

15
10

8

5

1
F

20

A

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

0

F

D

C

1

1

B

A

9

“Regions vary dramatically in the racial and ethnic
composition of their courts but not in the gender
composition of their courts.”
REGIONAL VARIATION
We can better understand the gap between who lives in
the United States and who sits in judgment by focusing on
different regions of the country. The U.S. Census divides
the country into four regions: Northeast, Midwest, South,
and West. We use those regions as they allow comparison to
other data collected on a regional basis.
Regions vary dramatically in the racial and ethnic
composition of their courts but not in the gender
composition of their courts. The estimated percentage of
women on state courts is relatively constant across the four

regions: only two percentage points above or below a mean
of 30% of state judges are women. We find only a weak
regional effect, after controlling for general population,
where the Northeast is less likely than other regions to select
women judges.
We find stronger regional effects for race and ethnicity
of judges. The South and the West, which have higher
numbers of racial and ethnic minorities than the Northeast
and Midwest, do not have comparably higher numbers of
minority judges. In fact, white, non-Hispanics in the general
population outnumber white, non-Hispanic judges by about
two to one.

Figure 12. United States Census Geographic Regions

West
Northeast
South
Midwest

The

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

10

Figure 13. Women as a Percentage of the General Population and of of State Courts by Census Region

60

51.29

50.97

50.71

50.16

50
40

32.93

31.92

28.25

30

28.09

20
10
0
northeast

midwest

Women

south

west

Women Judges

Figure 14. Racial and Ethnic Minorities as a Percentage of the General
Population and of State Courts by Census Region
48.73

50
40

41.69

33.18

30

23.31

21.12

19.74

20

22.96

13.76

10
0
northeast

The

Gavel

gap

midwest

south

Minorities

Minority judges

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

west

11

“State trial judges have a great deal of authority and
discretion over criminal prosecutions.”
CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND RACE

daily basis. Thus, even if appellate courts could closely audit a
criminal conviction, they are highly likely to affirm it.

State trial judges have a great deal of authority and discretion
over criminal prosecutions. State appellate courts review only
a fraction of criminal convictions, and much of that oversight
is limited by design and by necessity. Legal doctrines which
govern evidentiary, procedural, and substantive rulings
require or result in substantial deference to trial judges by
using standards of review such as clearly erroneous and
abuse of discretion and by limiting reversal to errors which
were likely to affect the outcome. Trial judges play central
roles in both plea bargaining and sentencing; however, plea
bargaining and sentencing are subject to little appellate
oversight. Finally, appellate courts lack the capacity to review
the large numbers of criminal rulings made by trial judges on a

Trial judges are the ultimate authority for almost all criminal
defendants. And, those defendants are disproportionately
minorities. The Bureau of Justice Statistics estimated that in
2009 in the 75 largest counties, nearly half (44%) of felony
defendants were non-Hispanic African Americans and nearly
one-quarter (24%) were Hispanic/Latino.4 We estimate
that more than three-quarters of trial judges are white. As
recently as May 2016, the U.S. Supreme Court has found
unconstitutional jury-selection practices that produce an allwhite jury.5 Yet, the reality is that minority defendants face a
nearly all-white trial bench in many states.

D EFEN DA NT S

TR I A L JU D G E S
African
American
7%

White
30%

Other
2%

The

Gavel

gap

Other
8%

African
American
44%

Hispanic/
Latino
24%

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

Hispanic/
Latino
5%

White
80%

12

CONCLUSION
President Barack Obama has emphasized the diversity of his
appointments to the federal judiciary, including landmark
appointments of people of color and LGBT people. As
Christopher Kang, who was in charge of the judicial nomination
process for President Obama, explained “when the men and
women who deliver justice look more like the

communities they serve, there is greater confidence in our
justice system overall.”6 We find that state courts do not look
like the communities they serve, which has ramifications for
the functioning of our judicial system and the rule of law. Our
findings are particularly important given the vital role state courts
play in our democracy, in our economy, and in our daily lives.

ATTRIBUTION
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
TRACEY E. GEORGE
Professor of Law and Political Science, Vanderbilt University
Professor George holds the Charles B. Cox III and Lucy D. Cox Family Chair in Law
and Liberty at Vanderbilt University. She is the Director of the Cecil D. Branstetter
Litigation and Dispute Resolution Program. She brings a social science perspective to
the study of judges and courts, judicial selection and elections, legal education and
the legal profession, and contract law and theory. Professor George was previously
on the faculty at Northwestern University and the University of Missouri-Columbia.
She is a member of the American Law Institute. Professor George earned her
undergraduate degree from SMU, her M.A. in political science from Washington
University in St. Louis, and her J.D. from Stanford University.

ALBERT H. YOON
Professor of Law and Economics,
University of Toronto Faculty of Law
Professor Yoon holds the Chair in Law and Economics at the University of Toronto.
His primary research areas are the legal profession, civil procedure, judicial behavior,
American political development, and corporate law. Professor Yoon was previously
on the faculty at Northwestern University School of Law, a Robert Wood Johnson
Scholar in Health Policy Research at U.C. Berkeley, a Law and Public Affairs Fellow
at Princeton University, and a Russell Sage Visiting Scholar in New York City. He is a
recipient of the Ronald H. Coase Prize from the University of Chicago for the best
published paper in Law & Economics, and is a member of the American Law Institute.
Professor Yoon received his undergraduate degree from Yale University, and his J.D.
and Ph.D. (Political Science) from Stanford University.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors thank our outstanding team of research assistants: Timo Vink and Elizabeth White at the University of Toronto
and David Adams, Cyle Catlett, Tracee Clements, David Creasy, Julia Gillespie, Dan Metzger, and Erik Peterson at Vanderbilt
University. We also thank Greg Goelzhauser, Lisa Hall, Michael Kang, Eric Lesh, Joanna Shepherd, Jennifer Bennett Shinall,
Jason Sowards, and the numerous judges who were willing to provide valuable advice and assistance on this project.

The

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gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

13

APPENDIX
TABLE A-1. State Trial Court Structure
Single Set of Trial Courts (Unified)

California, District of Columbia, Illinois, Maine,
Minnesota, Vermont

General and Specialized Trial Courts (Divided)

Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado,
Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii,
Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi,
Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North
Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Washington,
West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming

TABLE A-2. Appellate Court Structure

The

Two Supreme Courts

Oklahoma, Texas

Two Intermediate Appellate Courts

Alabama, Tennessee

No intermediate appellate court

Delaware, District of Columbia, Maine, Montana, New
Hampshire, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont,
West Virginia, Wyoming

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

14

TABLE A-3. Method of Selection of Trial Judges
One (or both) elected branches select
(gubernatorial appointment with legislative
confirmation or legislative appointment)

Delaware, District of Columbia, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Jersey, Virginia

Merit selection (typically a merit commission
nominates a panel of judges from which the
Governor and/or the legislature selects one)

Alaska, Arizona*, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Iowa,
Kansas*, Missouri*, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New
Mexico, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina,
Utah, Vermont, Wyoming

Nonpartisan election

Arkansas, California, Florida, Georgia, Idaho,
Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi,
Montana, Nevada, North Carolina, North Dakota,
Ohio, Oregon, South Dakota, Washington, West
Virginia, Wisconsin

Partisan election

Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, New York,
Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas

*These states are categorized as merit selection, but elect a minority of their judges (Arizona: non-partisan
elections in counties with a general population less than 250,000; Kansas: partisan elections in counties
which have not approved merit; Missouri: smaller, non-urban circuits use partisan elections).
Bolded states choose trial judges using a different method than used for appellate judges.
All categories are based on formal method of initial selection. States vary on how they handle vacancies that
occur before a sitting judge completes her term.

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WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

15

TABLE A-4. Method of Selection of Intermediate Appellate Judges*
One (or both) elected branches select

Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York,7 Virginia

Merit selection

Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut,
Florida, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland,
Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South
Carolina, Tennessee**, Utah

Nonpartisan election

Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Kentucky, Michigan,
Minnesota, Mississippi, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio,
Oregon, Washington, Wisconsin

Partisan election

Alabama, Illinois, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Texas

No intermediate appellate court

Delaware, District of Columbia, Maine, Montana, New
Hampshire, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont,
West Virginia, Wyoming

*North Dakota’s intermediate appellate court does not have permanent judges. The state supreme court
selects three active or retired judges (or attorneys) to serve on the intermediate appellate court for a term
not to exceed one year.
**Tennessee changed its method of appellate judge selection in January 2015 from merit selection (a
nominating commission submitted a list of three nominees to the governor who picked one) to elected
branch selection (gubernatorial nomination with legislative confirmation). None of the judges in the State
Bench Database were selected under the new method.
Bolded states choose intermediate appellate judges by a different method than they use for supreme court
judges.
All categories are based on formal method of initial selection. States vary on how they handle vacancies that
occur during a judicial term.

The

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

16

TABLE A-5. Method of Selection of Supreme Court Judges
One (or both) elected branches select

Delaware, District of Columbia, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Jersey, Virginia

Merit selection

Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut,
Florida, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland,
Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Mexico,
New York, Oklahoma, Rhode Island, South Carolina,
South Dakota, Tennessee*, Utah, Vermont, Wyoming

Nonpartisan election

Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Kentucky, Michigan,
Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, North
Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Washington,
West Virginia, Wisconsin

Partisan election

Alabama, Illinois, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Texas

* Tennessee changed its method of appellate judge selection in January 2015 from merit selection (a
nominating commission submitted a list of three nominees to the governor who picked one) to elected
branch selection (gubernatorial nomination with legislative confirmation). None of the judges in the State
Bench Database were selected under the new method.
All categories are based on formal method of initial selection. States vary on how they handle vacancies that
occur before a sitting judge completes her term.

The

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

17

TABLE A-6. Gender Breakdown of All State Courts (2014)
Percentage Male

Percentage Female

Total Number

State Appellate Judges

.6659

.3341

1,688

State Trial Judges

.7041

.2959

8,607

All State Court Judges

.6978

.3022

10,295

U.S. Population

.4927

.5073

321,000,000

TABLE A-7. Race/ Ethnicity Breakdown of All State Courts (2014)
Percentage
White NonHispanic

Percentage
AfricanAmerican

Percentage
Hispanic

Percentage
Other Race

State Appellate Judges

.8270

.0794

.0515

.0421

State Trial Judges

.7990

.0708

.0550

.0753

All State Court Judges

.8036

.0722

.0544

.0698

U.S. Population

.6172

.1238

.1766

.0824

TABLE A-8. Race and Gender Breakdown of All State Courts (2014)

The

Percentage
White Men

Percentage
Men of Color

Percentage
White Women

Percentage
Women of
Color

State Appellate Judges

.5705

.0954

.2565

.0776

State Trial Judges

.5804

.1237

.2186

.0773

All State Court Judges

.5787

.1191

.2249

.0773

U.S. Population

.3041

.1886

.3131

.1942

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

18

TABLE A-9. Population by Census Regions in the United States8
REGION
States in region

Population

Percentage
of U.S.
Population

NORTHEAST
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont

56,283,891

17.5%

MIDWEST
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North
Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin

67,907,403

21.1%

SOUTH
Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South
Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia

121,182,847

37.7%

WEST
Arizona, Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New
Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming

76,044,679

23.7%

TABLE A-10. Estimated Gender Breakdown of State Court Judges By
Region

The

Female Judges as a
Percentage of All Judges

Women as Percentage of
Population

Gavel Gap

Northeast

.3192

.5129

-0.3777

Midwest

.2825

.5071

-0.4429

South

.2809

.5097

-0.4489

West

.3293

.5016

-0.3435

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

19

TABLE A-11. Estimated Race and Ethnicity Breakdown of State
Court Judges By Region
Judges of Color as a Percentage
of All Judges

People of Color as Percentage
of Population

Gavel Gap

Northeast

.1974

.3318

-0.4051

Midwest

.1376

.2331

-.4097

South

.2112

.4169

-.4934

West

.2296

.4873

-0.5288

TABLE A-12. Estimated Gender Representativeness Rank of State
Courts

The

State

Female Judges as a
Percentage of All
State Judges

Women as a
Percentage of State
Population

Gavel
Gap

Representativeness
Rank

Alabama

0.2179

0.5154

-0.5771

37

Alaska

0.2200

0.4743

-0.5362

32

Arizona

0.3141

0.5033

-0.3758

16

Arkansas

0.2407

0.5087

-0.5268

30

California

0.3257

0.5034

-0.3531

13

Colorado

0.3000

0.4975

-0.3970

22

Connecticut

0.3056

0.5122

-0.4034

24

Delaware

0.2500

0.5162

-0.5157

28

District of
Columbia

0.4308

0.5256

-0.1804

3

Florida

0.3124

0.5112

-0.3889

21

Georgia

0.2297

0.5121

-0.5514

34

Hawaii

0.3590

0.4941

-0.2735

8

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

20

TABLE A-12. Estimated Gender Representativeness Rank of State
Courts

The

State

Female Judges as a
Percentage of All
State Judges

Women as a
Percentage of State
Population

Gavel
Gap

Representativeness
Rank

Idaho

0.1698

0.4992

-0.6599

50

Illinois

0.3050

0.5093

-0.4010

23

Indiana

0.2093

0.5074

-0.5875

40

Iowa

0.2362

0.5034

-0.5307

31

Kansas

0.1818

0.5016

-0.6375

47

Kentucky

0.2778

0.5076

-0.4528

26

Louisiana

0.2883

0.5109

-0.4357

25

Maine

0.3182

0.5104

-0.3765

18

Maryland

0.3966

0.5154

-0.2303

6

Massachusetts

0.3704

0.5151

-0.2810

9

Michigan

0.3307

0.5087

-0.3499

12

Minnesota

0.3946

0.5030

-0.2155

5

Mississippi

0.1765

0.5142

-0.6568

49

Missouri

0.2414

0.5095

-0.5262

29

Montana

0.2449

0.4977

-0.5080

27

Nebraska

0.2239

0.5021

-0.5541

35

Nevada

0.4138

0.4974

-0.1682

2

New Hampshire

0.3333

0.5060

-0.3412

11

New Jersey

0.3199

0.5120

-0.3752

15

New Mexico

0.4078

0.5047

-0.1921

4

New York

0.3219

0.5148

-0.3746

14

North Carolina

0.2155

0.5128

-0.5797

38

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

21

TABLE A-12. Estimated Gender Representativeness Rank of State
Courts
State

Female Judges as a
Percentage of All
State Judges

Women as a
Percentage of State
Population

Gavel
Gap

Representativeness
Rank

North Dakota

0.2157

0.4875

-0.5575

36

Ohio

0.3149

0.5105

-0.3832

19

Oklahoma

0.2065

0.5049

-0.5909

41

Oregon

0.4432

0.5053

-0.1228

1

Pennsylvania

0.3145

0.5109

-0.3844

20

Rhode Island

0.3214

0.5154

-0.3763

17

South Carolina

0.2131

0.5138

-0.5852

39

South Dakota

0.1957

0.4968

-0.6062

44

Tennessee

0.2037

0.5126

-0.6026

43

Texas

0.3476

0.5036

-0.3097

10

Utah

0.1733

0.4972

-0.6514

48

Vermont

0.2308

0.5071

-0.5449

33

Virginia

0.1895

0.5082

-0.6270

46

Washington

0.3791

0.5001

-0.2419

7

West Virginia

0.1127

0.5061

-0.7774

51

Wisconsin

0.2008

0.5033

-0.6012

42

Wyoming

0.1923

0.4898

-0.6074

45

*The Gender Gavel Gap reflects how closely the estimated percentage of women on the state bench matches
the predicted percentage. We predict that each state will have the same percentage of women on the state
bench as it has women in its general population. The Gavel Gap is the difference between the predicted
percentage and the estimated percentage.

The

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

22

TABLE A-13. Estimated Race and Ethnicity Representativeness Rank
of State Courts

The

State

Judges of Color as
a Percentage of All
State Judges

People of Color as a
Percentage of State
Population

Gavel Gap*

Representativeness
Rank

Alabama

0.1987

0.3381

-0.4123

21

Alaska

0.0200

0.3806

-0.9475

47

Arizona

0.3194

0.4379

-0.2706

12

Arkansas

0.1204

0.2661

-0.5477

32

California

0.2632

0.6155

-0.5724

33

Colorado

0.1100

0.3101

-0.6453

39

Connecticut

0.2698

0.3118

-0.1345

7

Delaware

0.1071

0.3631

-0.7049

43

District of
Columbia

0.5385

0.6416

-0.1607

8

Florida

0.1790

0.4419

-0.5950

35

Georgia

0.1532

0.4566

-0.6646

41

Hawaii

0.7949

0.7703

0.0319

4

Idaho

0.1321

0.1719

-0.2318

11

Illinois

0.2683

0.3771

-0.2884

13

Indiana

0.1163

0.1970

-0.4097

20

Iowa

0.0630

0.1290

-0.5119

28

Kansas

0.1080

0.2324

-0.5355

30

Kentucky

0.0926

0.1463

-0.3673

16

Louisiana

0.2774

0.4067

-0.3180

15

Maine

0.0000

0.0624

-1.0000

48

Maryland

0.3240

0.4738

-0.3161

14

Massachusetts

0.1481

0.2572

-0.4239

23

Michigan

0.1518

0.2419

-0.3727

17

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

23

TABLE A-13. Estimated Race and Ethnicity Representativeness Rank
of State Courts

The

State

Judges of Color as
a Percentage of All
State Judges

People of Color as a
Percentage of State
Population

Gavel Gap*

Representativeness
Rank

Minnesota

0.1472

0.1856

-0.2073

9

Mississippi

0.2647

0.4274

-0.3807

18

Missouri

0.1092

0.1988

-0.4508

25

Montana

0.2041

0.1327

0.5374

1

Nebraska

0.1791

0.1951

-0.0821

6

Nevada

0.1954

0.4850

-0.5971

36

New Hampshire

0.0000

0.0872

-1.0000

39

New Jersey

0.2343

0.4315

-0.4571

27

New Mexico

0.3689

0.6109

-0.3961

19

New York

0.2414

0.4347

-0.4446

24

North Carolina

0.2069

0.3591

-0.4238

22

North Dakota

0.0000

0.1340

-1.0000

50

Ohio

0.0938

0.1989

-0.5286

29

Oklahoma

0.0761

0.3298

-0.7693

46

Oregon

0.0973

0.2296

-0.5763

34

Pennsylvania

0.1215

0.2212

-0.4509

26

Rhode Island

0.0714

0.2546

-0.7194

44

South Carolina

0.1148

0.3615

-0.6825

42

South Dakota

0.2391

0.1696

0.4097

2

Tennessee

0.0926

0.2536

-0.6349

38

Texas

0.2568

0.5647

-0.5451

31

Utah

0.0800

0.2066

-0.6127

37

Vermont

0.0000

0.0647

-1.0000

51

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

24

TABLE A-13. Estimated Race and Ethnicity Representativeness Rank
of State Courts
State

Judges of Color as
a Percentage of All
State Judges

People of Color as a
Percentage of State
Population

Gavel Gap*

Representativeness
Rank

Virginia

0.2876

0.3686

-0.2198

10

Washington

0.0995

0.2961

-0.6639

40

West Virginia

0.0845

0.0751

0.1259

3

Wisconsin

0.0492

0.1779

-0.7232

45

Wyoming

0.1538

0.1590

-0.0323

5

*The Race and Ethnicity Gavel Gap reflects how closely the estimated percentage of racial and ethnic
minorities on the state bench matches the predicted percentage. We predict that each state will have the
same percentage of racial and ethnicity minorities on the state bench as it has racial and ethnic minorities in
its general population. The Gavel Gap is the difference between the predicted percentage and the estimated
percentage.

TABLE A-14. Combined Race and Ethnicity Representativeness Rank
of State Courts

The

State

Women or
Minorities as a
Percentage of State
Judges

Women or
Minorities as a
Percentage of State
Population

OVERALL Gavel
Gap*

Representativeness
Rank

Alabama

36%

68%

-47%

32

Alaska

24%

67%

-64%

50

Arizona

54%

73%

-26%

6

Arkansas

33%

64%

-48%

34

California

49%

81%

-39%

23

Colorado

37%

67%

-45%

30

Connecticut

46%

65%

-29%

9

Delaware

29%

70%

-59%

43

District of
Columbia

72%

84%

-14%

2

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

25

TABLE A-14. Combined Race and Ethnicity Representativeness Rank
of State Courts

The

State

Women or
Minorities as a
Percentage of State
Judges

Women or
Minorities as a
Percentage of State
Population

OVERALL Gavel
Gap*

Representativeness
Rank

Florida

40%

73%

-45%

29

Georgia

32%

74%

-56%

40

Hawaii

85%

88%

-4%

1

Idaho

28%

60%

-53%

38

Illinois

47%

69%

-31%

12

Indiana

32%

61%

-48%

33

Iowa

29%

57%

-49%

36

Kansas

27%

62%

-57%

42

Kentucky

35%

58%

-40%

25

Louisiana

45%

71%

-37%

17

Maine

32%

54%

-41%

26

Maryland

55%

74%

-26%

7

Massachusetts

44%

64%

-30%

11

Michigan

41%

62%

-34%

15

Minnesota

47%

60%

-21%

5

Mississippi

34%

72%

-53%

39

Missouri

31%

61%

-49%

35

Montana

41%

57%

-29%

8

Nebraska

36%

61%

-41%

27

Nevada

52%

74%

-30%

10

New Hampshire

33%

55%

-39%

24

New Jersey

45%

72%

-37%

18

New Mexico

63%

80%

-21%

4

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

26

TABLE A-14. Combined Race and Ethnicity Representativeness Rank
of State Courts

The

State

Women or
Minorities as a
Percentage of State
Judges

Women or
Minorities as a
Percentage of State
Population

OVERALL Gavel
Gap*

Representativeness
Rank

New York

46%

72%

-37%

16

North Carolina

34%

69%

-52%

37

North Dakota

22%

59%

-64%

48

Ohio

36%

60%

-41%

28

Oklahoma

27%

67%

-60%

46

Oregon

50%

63%

-21%

3

Pennsylvania

39%

61%

-37%

19

Rhode Island

39%

63%

-38%

20

South Carolina

28%

70%

-60%

47

South Dakota

39%

60%

-34%

14

Tennessee

26%

64%

-60%

45

Texas

48%

79%

-39%

22

Utah

21%

62%

-66%

51

Vermont

23%

54%

-57%

41

Virginia

42%

69%

-39%

21

Washington

44%

66%

-33%

13

West Virginia

20%

54%

-64%

49

Wisconsin

24%

59%

-59%

44

Wyoming

31%

58%

-47%

31

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

27

Sources
Court Statistics Project, Examining the Work of State Courts: An Overview of 2013 State Court Caseloads, http://www.
courtstatistics.org/~/media/Microsites/Files/CSP/EWSC_CSP_2015.ashx (a joint project of the Conference of State Court
Administrators and the National Center for State Courts).

1

If a state uses a different method for selecting supreme court judges and intermediate appellate court judges, the appellate
judge map reflects the state’s method of selecting supreme court judges.

2

United States Census Bureau, American Community Survey, https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs/news/datareleases.html.

3

Bureau of Justice Statistics, Felony Defendants in Large Urban Counties, 2009 Statistical Tables http://www.bjs.gov/content/
pub/pdf/fdluc09.pdf
4

5

Foster v. Chatman, No. 14-8349 (May 23, 2016).

Christopher Kang, “Editorial: President Obama, Nominate the First Asian-American Supreme Court Justice,” NBC News,
Feb. 14, 2016, http://www.nbcnews.com/news/asian-america/editorial-president-obama-nominate-first-asian-americansupreme-court-justice-n518496.
6

The governor of New York appoints judges to its intermediate appellate court (Appellate Division) from the general
jurisdiction trial courts (supreme court). The governor appoints judges to the state court of last resort (Court of Appeals)
from a nominating commission’s list and with the consent of the state senate.

7

United States Census Bureau, Regions and Divisions, http://www.census.gov/econ/census/help/geography/regions_and_
divisions.html; United States Census Bureau, United States Population Growth by Region, https://www.census.gov/popclock/
data_tables.php?component=growth.

8

The

Gavel

gap

WHO SITS IN JUDGMENT ON STATE COURTS?

28