By Roberta M. Gubbins
Legal news
The State Bar of Michigan Board of Commissioners recently passed the Michigan Pledge to Achieve Diversity and Inclusion which, according to SBM Director of Diversity Gregory P. Conyers, will be “used to further the shared vision of a more diverse and inclusive legal profession.”
With the passage of the pledge, the next step will be to seek signatories in order to continue building momentum.
“The Bar (SBM) is committed to encouraging colleagues to sign onto the pledge when asked,” Conyers said.
During a reception at the annual meeting in Grand Rapids next month, Conyers said “lawyers and others interested can sign on indicating their support of diversity in the profession.”
Nationally, the legal profession lags far behind other professions in having diverse membership, according to an American Bar Association study of racial and ethnic diversity.
The poll showed that only 10 percent of lawyers were people of color, much lower than medical doctors (25 percent), accountants (21 percent), and college professors (18 percent).
In Michigan, the numbers are no better.
The State Bar report of 2009-10 shows that, among all the active Michigan resident members who reported race and ethnicity, African Americans, Asian Americans, American Indians, Arab Americans and Hispanic Latino Americans together made up just 10 percent of Michigan’s lawyers.
The roots of the commitment to diversity can be traced back to the 1986 report of the Michigan Supreme Court’s Citizen’s Commission to Improve Michigan’s Courts.
As a result of that study, the commission recommended that court employment and court-assigned duties be available to all, and that the racial/ethnic composition of courts’ staffs reflect as soon as possible the composition of the community.
The next step came in 1989, with the Final Reports of the Michigan Supreme Court’s task force, which concluded that citizens and lawyers alike believed that bias affects justice.
The report contained 67 recommendations to eliminate bias and discrimination.
In 1998, the final report of the task force contained concrete recommendations about how to improve the diversity of the profession. In 2003, the State Bar created the Committee on Justice Initiatives and formed the Equal Access Initiative to continue to address these issues.
This summer, the State Bar held three Diversity Project Colloquia at law schools across the state, the final one held in June at Michigan State University College of Law.
From these efforts came the final drafting of the pledge passed by board of commissioners.
In addition to obtaining signatures in support of the pledge, the State Bar plans to work to identify best practices and develop an action blueprint to assist its members in achieving and maintaining diversity and inclusion.
An evaluation of the process is scheduled in one year.
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