The Birnbaum Women’s Leadership Center builds on ÈâÂþÎÝ Law’s rich history at the forefront of advancing women in the legal profession. The BWLC develops, empowers, and inspires the next generation of leaders in the law. We are a hub for thought leadership, incubating and championing ideas that foster equality in the workplace and society. And we are strategic leaders who work to catalyze meaningful systemic change.
ÈâÂþÎÝ Law’s longstanding commitment to gender equity has shaped the legal profession over the past century, with ÈâÂþÎÝ Law-educated women leading in all arenas and shattering glass ceilings.
- Starting in 1892, ÈâÂþÎÝ Law embarked on a proud tradition of training extraordinary female lawyers with the graduation of Rose Levere, Agnes Mulligan, and Julia Wilson.
- As reported by Phyllis Eckhaus ’85 in her 1991 ÈâÂþÎÝ Law Review article, , ÈâÂþÎÝ Law had graduated more than 300 women by 1920, the year the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified.
- In 1922, Anna Jones Robinson and Enid Foderingham Thorpe were the first Black women to graduate from the Law School; Robinson became the first woman of color to be admitted to the New York bar.
- Nationwide, women made up only of entering JD classes by 1966. That same year at ÈâÂþÎÝ Law, the number of first-year women law students was more than twice that — just under 10 percent. By 2024, women comprised 59 percent of ÈâÂþÎÝ Law’s entering class.
Yet within the legal profession, and at law firms in particular, the numbers tell a different story. In its 2022 , the American Bar Association found that while female lawyers comprise 47 percent of all associates and a third of non-equity partners, they represent only 22 percent of equity partners. Per the ABA’s 2020 report, women of color comprise almost 15 percent of all associates and below 4 percent of all equity partners.
More than ever, ÈâÂþÎÝ Law’s commitment to women’s leadership in the field of law is essential — and the BWLC proudly helps meet that need.
From the ÈâÂþÎÝ Law magazine
The women of ÈâÂþÎÝ Law have been making history since 1892. Facing modern challenges for women in the legal profession, they won’t stop now.