WOMEN CHIEF JUSTICES ACROSS AFRICA
Click below to read our background paper:
Her Ladyship Chief Justice: The Rise of Female Leadership in the Judiciary in Africa
Umu Hawa Tejan-Jalloh
Sierra Leone
Chief Justice, 2008-2015
Umu Hawa Tejan-Jalloh was appointed and approved by the House of Parliament to act as the first woman Chief Justice for Sierra Leone. Her Lady Justice, Tejan-Jalloh was born in Sierra Leone and attended secondary school at the Harford Secondary School for Girls in Moyamba and the St. Edwards Secondary School in King Tom, Freetown. Justice Umu Hawa Tejan-Jalloh holds a Bachelor of Arts degree (History and Political Science) from Columbia University, New York City, N.Y. USA in 1971. Immediately after her graduation from Columbia University she pursued a career in Law at the College of Law, London, and did her Post Finals at the Council of Legal Education in London. In November 1974, she was called to the Bar of the Honorable Society of Gary's Inn. In 1987, she was sponsored together with other commonwealth students by the British Council to pursue a course at the Institute of Advanced Legal Education, University of London, in International Law, Public Law, Legislative and Treaty Drafting.
She started her career as a State Counsel but would later be promoted to the post of Senior State Counsel and Principal State Counsel after that. She would be appointed as a High Court Judge in 1995. Tejan-Jalloh became a Fellow of the Commonwealth Judicial Institute in Halifax, Canada, in 2000 while serving as a High Court Judge. In 2004 she was promoted to the Appeals Court. In January 2007, her excellence in the judicial bench led her to be approved by the Parliament to become a Supreme Court Judge, one of the very few women in Sierra Leone to do so at that time, thus setting the stage for her eventual appointment as the Chief Justice. Uma Hawa Tejan has always been known to be a very exceptional judge.
During her tenure as a High Court Judge, she gained a reputation for justly applying the law without fear or favor. Stories of her enduring harrowing journeys through risky highways under threats of rebel ambushes to held courts in northern Sierra Leone around the same time showed her commitment to serving the people of her nation in delivering justice. Her work has garnered her numerous awards and recognitions both in her native country as well as internationally. She was made an honorary citizen of Little Rock, the hometown of former American president Bill Clinton. She would then become a Goodwill Ambassador of Arkansas. Tejan-Jalloh was also awarded the Grand Commander of the Order of the Rokel, one of the highest National Honours in Sierra Leone.
Umu Hawa Tejan-Jalloh
Sierra Leone
Chief Justice, 2008-2015
"Umu Hawa Tejan-Jalloh was appointed and approved by the House of Parliament to act as the first woman Chief Justice for Sierra Leone. Her Lady Justice, Tejan-Jalloh was born in Sierra Leone and attended secondary school at the Harford Secondary School for Girls in Moyamba and the St. Edwards Secondary School in King Tom, Freetown. Justice Umu Hawa Tejan-Jalloh holds a Bachelor of Arts degree (History and Political Science) from Columbia University, New York City, N.Y. USA in 1971. Immediately after her graduation from Columbia University she pursued a career in Law at the College of Law, London, and did her Post Finals at the Council of Legal Education in London. In November 1974, she was called to the Bar of the Honorable Society of Gary's Inn. In 1987, she was sponsored together with other commonwealth students by the British Council to pursue a course at the Institute of Advanced Legal Education, University of London, in International Law, Public Law, Legislative and Treaty Drafting.
She started her career as a State Counsel but would later be promoted to the post of Senior State Counsel and Principal State Counsel after that. She would be appointed as a High Court Judge in 1995. Tejan-Jalloh became a Fellow of the Commonwealth Judicial Institute in Halifax, Canada, in 2000 while serving as a High Court Judge. In 2004 she was promoted to the Appeals Court. In January 2007, her excellence in the judicial bench led her to be approved by the Parliament to become a Supreme Court Judge, one of the very few women in Sierra Leone to do so at that time, thus setting the stage for her eventual appointment as the Chief Justice. Uma Hawa Tejan has always been known to be a very exceptional judge.
During her tenure as a High Court Judge, she gained a reputation for justly applying the law without fear or favor. Stories of her enduring harrowing journeys through risky highways under threats of rebel ambushes to held courts in northern Sierra Leone around the same time showed her commitment to serving the people of her nation in delivering justice. Her work has garnered her numerous awards and recognitions both in her native country as well as internationally. She was made an honorary citizen of Little Rock, the hometown of former American president Bill Clinton. She would then become a Goodwill Ambassador of the Arkansas. Tejan-Jalloh was also awarded the Grand Commander of the Order of the Rokel, one of the highest National Honours in Sierra Leone."