01891nam a22001817a 450000500170000000800410001702200140005810000220007224501180009426000570021230000160026944000680028550500650035352011330041865000840155170000390163585600350167420240108151400.0240108b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d a0195-6744 aFernandez, Frank  aThe Color of Law Schoolb: Examining Gender and Race Intersectionality in Law School Admissions (Journal Article) aChicago b: University of Chicago Press c, May 2022 a455–485p. aAmerican Journal of Educationv, Volume 128: Number 3, May 2022 a***______{For Hard Copy, Please visit Library.}________***  aAbstract: Purpose: Law schools are gatekeepers to powerful positions, including US federal judicial systems and legislative branches. Although scholars have addressed underrepresentation of women and racial minorities in law schools and the legal profession, they tend to examine gender and race separately. This study is a critical quantitative analysis of law school admissions among women of color. Research Methods/Approach: We use an intersectionality framework, weighted effect coding, marginal effects, predicted probabilities, and multilevel models to examine admissions data from 25 public law schools. Findings: Unlike Black men, Black women did not receive the full strength of the independent positive relationship between being Black and law school admission, and their access to legal education varies across institutional rankings. Implications: These findings provide quantitative evidence for the importance of the concept of intersectionality—not just for examining multiple individual identities but also how intersected identities matter during selective admissions processes across institutional rankings. aLaw School| Gender and Race Intersectionality| Law School Admissions| Education aRo, Hyun Kyoung | Wilson, Miranda  uhttps://doi.org/10.1086/719119