Even Harvard Law School Lawyers Face Gender Based Obstacles and Varied Career Trajectories Summary: A recent report released by Harvard Law School shows that its graduates continue to face various obstacles in their careers.
It's been over fifty years since Harvard Law School admitted female students and the school just issued a report examining how HLS's female graduates are faring in the workplace. The report confirms that a fancy law degree is no free pass when it comes to gender related obstacles in the legal profession. The report surveyed female and male HLS alums from the classes of 1975, 1985, 1995 and 2000.Though primarily focused on gender disparities, the report also provides interesting insight into the career trajectories of HLS alums of both genders. Most striking, the study found that over one-fourth (28%) of graduates surveyed are no longer practicing law at all. Gender Issues The 70-page report concludes: "Even women who start their careers with the benefit of an educational credential traditionally thought to be an important hedge against adversity