Silver Gavel Award | |
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Awarded for | Honors outstanding work by those who help improve comprehension of jurisprudence in the United States |
Sponsored by | American Bar Association |
Date | 1958 |
Country | United States |
Official website | Official website |
The Silver Gavel Award (also known as the ABA Silver Gavel Awards for Media and The Arts) is an annual award the American Bar Association gives to honor outstanding work by those who help improve comprehension of jurisprudence in the United States.
The award is the American Bar Association's highest form of recognition. The American Bar Association gives out the award during its annual meeting, bestowing one award in each of several categories. Decisions on award recipients are announced by the chairman of the American Bar Association's standing committee on gavel awards. In a comment in the ABA Journal, American Bar Association Division for Public Education representative Howard Kaplan noted, "From the very beginning, the Association has recognized that legal drama has an unmatched capacity to humanize legal actors and, well, dramatize legal issues for public audiences."
The Bar Association gave the first award in 1958. The film directed by Sidney Lumet, 12 Angry Men, received the award in 1958.Stanley Kramer's movie Judgment at Nuremberg received the award in 1962, and To Kill a Mockingbird directed by Robert Mulligan was recognized with the award in 1963. In 1985, 391 candidates were entered in consideration to receive a Silver Gavel. In addition to 15 honorees recognized with Silver Gavel Awards in 1987, the American Bar Association also handed out 20 Certificates of Merit. In 1988, 298 organizations submitted 500 candidates for consideration for the Silver Gavel. A total of 12 awards were given out in 1996, in categories including literary works, pieces written in periodicals, journalism, plays, and writing for the screen. The 51st Silver Gavel Awards were announced by American Bar Association president William H. Neukom in Washington, D.C. at the National Press Club and included honorees The Denver Post, The Dallas Morning News, and Jeffrey Toobin for his book The Nine: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court. In 2011 Judge Jean Hudson Boyd was the first woman to receive the award.