American Lawyers

Portada
Oxford University Press, USA, 1989 M11 30 - 424 páginas
This detailed portrait of American lawyers traces their efforts to professionalize during the last 100 years by erecting barriers to control the quality and quantity of entrants. Abel describes the rise and fall of restrictive practices that dampened competition among lawyers and with outsiders. He shows how lawyers simultaneously sought to increase access to justice while stimulating demand for services, and their efforts to regulate themselves while forestalling external control. Data on income and status illuminate the success of these efforts. Charting the dramatic transformation of the profession over the last two decades, Abel documents the growing number and importance of lawyers employed outside private practice (in business and government, as judges and teachers) and the displacement of corporate clients they serve. Noting the complexity of matching ever more diverse entrants with more stratified roles, he depicts the mechanism that law schools and employers have created to allocate graduates to jobs and socialize them within their new environments. Abel concludes with critical reflections on possible and desirable futures for the legal profession.

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Contenido

THEORIES OF THE PROFESSIONS
14
CONTROLLING PRODUCTION BY PRODUCERS
27
Marxist Theories of Professions in the Class Structure
30
Theoretical Frameworks for Understanding
39
Tightening Control Over Supply
48
The Trajectory of Entry Control
71
Influences on the Production of Lawyers
77
The Characteristics of Lawyers
83
b Education of American Population 18701970
252
Number Taking LSAT Completing LSDAS and Entering Law School 194748 to 198687
253
Fulltime and Parttime Law Students 188990 to 1985
254
Law School Tuition selected institutions and years
255
Proportion of Students Enrolled at ABAApproved Law Schools Graduating Three Years Later 196385
256
Law School Attrition Aggregate Enrollment 192241
257
Attrition at ABAApproved Law Schools Fulltime and Parttime 193786
258
Attrition at Selected Schools 192484 thirdyear students as percentage of firstyear students three years earlier
259

Demographic Change
108
Defining the Monopoly
112
Price Fixing
118
A NEW STRATEGY
127
Public Interest Law
134
SELFREGULATION
142
Protecting the Client Against Financial Loss
150
The Record of SelfRegulation
156
The Status of Lawyers
163
Private Practice
178
One Profession or Many? The Dilemmas
208
The Rationalization of the Labor Market
214
The Revival of Apprenticeship
221
State Educational Requirements for Admission to Bar 1935
249
Total Length of Prelegal and Legal Education of Law Students 188990 to 1938
250
Effect of Educational Requirements
251
Attrition of Male and Female Law Students 197172
261
12 Attrition of Minority Students in ABAApproved Law Schools 197172 to 198586
262
Admissions to Bar on Motion and by Diploma Privilege
263
14 Residence Required before Application Examination or Admission number of states
265
Bar Examination Results Selected States 19027
266
Bar Examination Results by States 192229
267
National Bar Examination Results 192785
269
Number of Lawyers
277
Characteristics of Lawyers
284
SelfRegulation
291
Differentiation Within the Legal Profession
298
NOTES
319
BIBLIOGRAPHY
355
American Lawyers
365
INDEX
389
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