An attorney and judge. The 116th US Supreme Court justice and the first African-American woman in this position.
Ketanji Brown Jackson was born in Washington, DC, and grew up in Miami, Florida. She attended Palmetto Senior high school, where she was a member of the debate team and president of the student body. She studied government at Harvard University, graduating magna cum laude, and then worked for a short time as a researcher and reporter at TIME Magazine. In 1993, at 23, she continued her studies at Harvard Law School, where she served as the supervising editor of the Harvard Law Review. In 1996, the same year she received her law degree, she married Patrick Graves Jackson.
For the next decade, she worked in both the private and public sectors. She clerked for several federal judges, including Judge Patti B. Saris of the US District Court for the District of Massachusetts, Judge Bruce M. Selya of the US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, and Justice Stephen Breyer of the US Supreme Court.
In 2003, at the age of 33, Jackson returned to work for the government, first as an assistant special counsel to the US Sentencing Commission and then as an assistant federal public defender. In 2009, President Obama nominated her to serve as vice-chair of the US Sentencing Commission for four years. After President Barack Obama’s nomination, she began serving on the US District Court for the District of Columbia in March 2013.
In June 2021, following President Joe Biden’s nomination, she was confirmed as a circuit judge for the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit. In the following year, President Biden announced her nomination for associate justice of the US Supreme Court, and on April 7th, 2022, 52 years old Jackson became the first black woman in the Supreme Court. She is also the first federal public defender to sit on the court and the first justice in almost 30 years to have represented criminal defendants.
Jackson is serving on various boards and committees, including the Judicial Conference Committee on Defender Services, Harvard University’s Board of Overseers, the Council of the American Law Institute, the board of Georgetown Day School, and the US Supreme Court Fellows Commission.
Senate confirms Ketanji Brown Jackson to Supreme Court
Ketanji Brown Jackson has secured her place as the first Black woman on the U.S. Supreme Court.
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“Be open to new ideas and experiences because you’ll never know when someone else will have an interesting thought or when a new door will open to take you on the journey of your dreams.”
“Be open to new ideas and experiences because you’ll never know when someone else will have an interesting thought or when a new door will open to take you on the journey of your dreams.”
Fun Facts
- She has two daughters.
- Her name, Ketanji Onyika, is of West African origin, which means "lovely one."
- Her parents studied at segregated schools and historically black colleges and universities.
- She credits her interest in law to her father, who left his teaching job to become a lawyer when she was in preschool. She used to color next to him while he studied legal texts.
- In her senior year of high school, she won the national oratory title at the National Catholic Forensic League Championships in New Orleans.
- In high school, her guidance counselor told her not to apply to Harvard and that she should not set her sights so high.
- In college, she was a member of the Black Students Association and led protests against a student who displayed a Confederate flag from his dorm window.
- During college, she took drama classes and performed improv comedy.
- Through her marriage, she is related to Republican politician Paul Ryan.
- She is a member of the Cosmos Club, a private social club for distinguished professionals.
Awards
- Women's Bar Association of the District of Columbia's Stars of the Bar Award (2019)
- University of Chicago Law School's Distinguished Visiting Jurist, Third Annual Judge James B. Parsons Legacy Award (2020)
- Columbia Law School's Constance Baker Motley Award (2021)
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Senate confirms Ketanji Brown Jackson to Supreme Court
Ketanji Brown Jackson has secured her place as the first Black woman on the U.S. Supreme Court.This post is also available in:
Español