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Barriers Must Fall: How much has the legal industry changed for women?

Last year marked 100 years since women's entry into the legal profession. Ahead of International Women's Day this month, Shelina Begum explores how the legal industry has changed and whether barriers are still preventing women from securing senior roles

(Image: David Sutherland)

A year after winning the right to vote in 1918, women were allowed to practice law. The Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919 paved the way for women to enter the profession as solicitors and barristers in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ for the first time.

Since then, there have been some pivotal firsts.

Madge Easton Anderson, a graduate of Glasgow University, joined the profession in 1920 becoming the first female in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to do so.

Ivy Williams became the first female to be admitted to the bar in 1922 while Rose Heilbron and Helena Normanton took the silk in 1949 and Elizabeth Lane was appointed to the High Court in 1965.

The last two decades also saw Lady Hale become the first woman Lord of Appeal in 2004, the first female justice of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Supreme Court in 2009 and the court’s first female president in 2017.

In Manchester, the city where the suffragist movement was born, women are also at the forefront of the legal profession.

But while women, according to the Law Society, now make up 50.1% of practising solicitors, a century later, women still only represent 28% of partners in private practice with the figures for equity partners even lower.

Statistics from the Bar Standards Board show that only 14.8% of QCs are women.