exhaustive and informative ... a thought-provoking analysis ... well worth reading

American Bar Association Journal

Based on an extensive survey of historical, sociological, and legal sources, American Lawyers traces the development of the legal profession during the past century. The most comprehensive work on the subject in over thirty years, this seminal study offers a disturbing portrait of the character, evolution, and future of law and lawyers in the United States. Since their emergence in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, Abel argues, bar associations have consciously shaped and controlled the development of the profession. American Lawyers have deliberately erected entry barriers designed to restrict the number and raise the social status of lawyers, and have intentionally dampened competition. Abel demonstrates how lawyers sought to increase access to justice while simultaneously stimulating demand for legal services, and how they implemented self-regulation to forestall external control. 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.
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"Richard Abel's most recent project has turned contemporary history like a craftsman to provide us with a punctilious chronicle of a transformative period in English legal politics. The rishness of English Lawyers lets us see individuals and institutions respond to one another, develop and lose credibility, succeed and fail in the marketplace od ideas, and parlay those positions into future successes and losses. We can watch lawyers hoist the profession and themselveswith their own rhetorical petard, and we also witness the interaction of argumentation, ideology, and interests in modern politics."--Law and Politics Book Review "In this outstanding book, Abel provides a wide-ranging and provocative treatment of the American legal profession. He masterfully synthesizes a large volume of literature...and brings a wealth of data to bear on a variety of important topics....Although many fine studies of the American legal profession have appeared in the past 20 years, none are so systematic and comprehensive. Highly recommended."--Choice "A provocative and often disturbing portrait of American lawyers....Comprehensive and compelling."--ABA Journal "Powerful and eloquent...[Abel's] work will serve as the standard reference for many generations....Should be read by every member of the legal profession, especially the leaders of the organized bar."--Texas Law Review "Abel has an ax to grind--fortunately an ax in serious need of grinding....The book should be read for its important insights."--The Nation "The first comprehensive treatment of the American legal profession since Blaustein & Porter's book of 1954. American Lawyers is also an extremely useful compendium of historical and contemporary research about lawyers, illustrated through the assembly and interpretive synthesis of a vast amount of statistical data on the profession since the late 19th century. No other scholar even approaches Abel in easy command of these sources....Its synthesis of quantitative work will be of enduring value."--Robert W. Gordon, Stanford Law School "Should have a major impact on the field. It offers a provocative--and critical--interpretation of the profession at large that has the potential to become an important text, a useful reference point, and a book to engender debate in the profession."--Terence Halliday, Deputy Director, American Bar Foundation "Richard Abel's American Lawyers offers a masterful and provocative synthesis of an immense range of information, until now virtually unobtainable, about the legal profession in the United States. It is an absolutely indispensable starting point for understanding the role of lawyers in American society."--Marc S. Galanter, University of Wisconsin Law School "A vital resource for any scholar in the field of the legal profession. More importantly, it ought to be read by every lawyer and those who care about the future of the legal profession."--Robert Stevens, Chancellor, University of California, Santa Cruz "Professor Abel's book shows that in the last hundred years, the largest legal profession in the world has mirrored the workings of power, the dynamics of social inequality, the ideological contradictions and dreams of reform of American society. He leaves not one aspect unexamined and not one stone unturned. This is an unprecedented, definitive, and exemplary work."--Magali Sarfatti Larson, Temple University "Abel's tour de force is both a penetrating examination of radical, critical, and functional traditions in the sociology of the professions and a coherent interpretation of a vast amont of empirical data about lawyers."--William L.F. Felstiner, Director, American Bar Foundation "A sophisticated and extraordinarily well-documented critical analysis of the disturbing changes going on in the American legal profession today, which does not avoid the task of suggesting reforms by which the profession can justify preserving its privileges."--Eliot Freidson, New York University "American Lawyers is a brilliant synthesis of theoretical and empirical research on the past, present, and future of the American legal profession by its closest student and leading academic critic. It will help set the agenda for academic and policy debates about the role of lawyers in our society."--David M. Trubek, University of Wisconsin "Abel's American Lawyers is by far the most comprehensive treatment of the subject. He has synthesized data from diverse and fugitive sources, and he gives us a sustained analysis of the bar's ironic progress in two, apparently contradictory, directions. As Abel demonstrates, the legal profession over the past several decades has become more homogeneous in social class of origin while, at the same time, it became more highly stratified by differentiation in clientele and in the corresponding styles of legal work."--John F. Heinz, Distinguished Research Fellow, American Bar Foundation "Richard Abel's most recent project has turned contemporary history like a craftsman to provide us with a punctilious chronicle of a transformative period in English legal politics. The rishness of English Lawyers lets us see individuals and institutions respond to one another, develop and lose credibility, succeed and fail in the marketplace od ideas, and parlay those positions into future successes and losses. We can watch lawyers hoist the profession and themselveswith their own rhetorical petard, and we also witness the interaction of argumentation, ideology, and interests in modern politics."--Law and Politics Book Review
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780195072631
Publisert
1992
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
641 gr
Høyde
233 mm
Bredde
165 mm
Dybde
19 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
424

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