Lawyers in Society: Comparative TheoriesRichard L. Abel, Philip Simon Coleman Lewis Contains comparative and theoretical essays on the legal profession around the world. |
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Page xi
... increased in most countries from trivial proportions as late as the 1960s to nearly half today — and what is the significance for both women lawyers and the legal system ? Should the ongoing transformation of the legal profession be ...
... increased in most countries from trivial proportions as late as the 1960s to nearly half today — and what is the significance for both women lawyers and the legal system ? Should the ongoing transformation of the legal profession be ...
Page 7
... increased by about a third ; new admissions to the bar skyrocketed by an amazing 90 percent between 1970 and 1975. The recent growth has been even more rapid . Yet , in a sense this growth has only heightened a trend already marked in ...
... increased by about a third ; new admissions to the bar skyrocketed by an amazing 90 percent between 1970 and 1975. The recent growth has been even more rapid . Yet , in a sense this growth has only heightened a trend already marked in ...
Page 10
... increasing attack , and yet still part of the British legal scene . There is also stratification in the sociological sense , which crosscuts the British classification , to be sure . The American literature , in particular , has placed ...
... increasing attack , and yet still part of the British legal scene . There is also stratification in the sociological sense , which crosscuts the British classification , to be sure . The American literature , in particular , has placed ...
Page 15
... increases in numbers of lawyers in country after country . Yet , we need not dismiss Johnsen's point entirely . There is a difference between the absolute and relative roles of lawyers . Relative importance may be waning , at least in ...
... increases in numbers of lawyers in country after country . Yet , we need not dismiss Johnsen's point entirely . There is a difference between the absolute and relative roles of lawyers . Relative importance may be waning , at least in ...
Page 21
... increased tremendously in many countries ( Lewis , 1986 ) . In the United States , law firms have grown greatly in size , and the ( apparent ) power and activity of lawyers , particularly Washington lawyers , has also increased . There ...
... increased tremendously in many countries ( Lewis , 1986 ) . In the United States , law firms have grown greatly in size , and the ( apparent ) power and activity of lawyers , particularly Washington lawyers , has also increased . There ...
Contents
27 | |
44 | |
51 | |
80 | |
101 | |
Demand Creation | 110 |
Geographic Distribution | 120 |
Income and Status | 127 |
The Comparative | 196 |
The Legal Profession and the Rise and Fall of the New Class | 256 |
A StateCentered Approach | 289 |
Revolution as a Starting Point for the Comparative Analysis | 322 |
Neocorporatist Variations | 375 |
Putting Law Back into the Sociology of Lawyers | 478 |
Contributors | 527 |
Afterword The Reprint Edition | 557 |
Common terms and phrases
Abel and Philip advocates American Bar Foundation autonomy bar associations barristers Belgium Berkeley Brazil bureaucratic California Press century Civil Law World clients common law Comparative corporate corporatism corporatist courts cultural economic England and Wales English Federal Feminism feminist formal France functions gender Germany groups higher education historical ideology increased institutions interests Italy Journal judges jurists Law & Society law countries law firms law graduates Law Review law school law students Lawyers in Society legal aid legal profession legal services legal system litigation London loss of supply monopoly neocorporatist Norway number of lawyers occupations organization percent perspective Philip S. C. Lewis political private practice private practitioners profes reform represent revolution Richard L role rules sector social Society Review Sociology Sociology of Law solicitors status structure theory tion United United Kingdom University of California University Press women lawyers York
Popular passages
Page 205 - the redundant male', have entered contemporary discourse. The anthropologist, Margaret Mead, summed up the traditional situation: In every known society, the male's need for achievement can be recognized. Men may cook, or weave or dress dolls or hunt humming-birds, but if such activities are appropriate occupations for men, then the whole society, men and women alike, votes them as important. When the same occupations are performed by women, they are regarded as less important.
Page 380 - Corporatism can be defined as a system of interest representation in which the constituent units are organized into a limited number of singular, compulsory, non-competitive, hierarchically ordered and functionally differentiated categories, recognized or licensed (if not created) by the state and granted a deliberate representational monopoly within their respective categories in exchange for observing certain controls on their selection of leaders and articulation of demands and supports.
Page 455 - ... utterly incongruous with the new methods of power whose operation is not ensured by right but by technique, not by law but by normalization, not by punishment but by control, methods that are employed on all levels and in forms that go beyond the state and its apparatus.
Page 429 - a body of binding obligations regarded as right by one party and acknowledged as the duty by the other" which has been ^institutionalized within the legal institution so that society can continue to function in an orderly manner on the basis of rules so maintained. In short, reciprocity is the basis of custom; but the law rests on the basis of this double institutionalization. Central in it is that some of the customs of some of the institutions of society are restated in such a way that they can...
Page 322 - The one great principle of the English law is to make business for itself. There is no other principle distinctly, certainly, and consistently maintained through all its narrow turnings. Viewed by this light it becomes a coherent scheme and not the monstrous maze the laity are apt to think it. Let them but once clearly perceive that its grand principle is to make business for itself at their expense, and surely they will cease to grumble.
Page 459 - Rule change is in itself likely to have little effect because the system is so constructed that changes in the rules can be filtered out unless accompanied by changes at other levels. In a setting of overloaded institutional facilities, inadequate costly legal services, and unorganized parties, beneficiaries may lack the resources to secure implementation; or an RP may restructure the transaction to escape the thrust of the new rule. (Leff, 1970b; Rothwax, 1969:143; Cf. Grossman, 1970). Favorable...
Page 205 - In every known human society, the male's need for achievement can be recognized. Men may cook, or weave or dress dolls or hunt humming-birds, but if such activities are appropriate occupations of men, then the whole society, men and women alike, votes them as important. When the same occupations are performed by women, they are regarded as less important. In a great number of human societies men's sureness of their sex role is tied up with their right, or ability, to practice some activity that women...
Page 446 - ... homogeneity of power in these various instances corresponds the general form of submission in the one who is constrained by it — whether the individual in question is the subject opposite the monarch, the citizen opposite the state, the child opposite the parent, or the disciple opposite the master. A legislative power on one side, and an obedient subject on the other.