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English Lawyers Between Market and State
0 - Default Title
Description
The profession had to respond to a greatly increased production of law graduates and the desire of lawyer mothers (and also fathers) to raise their families. It had to replace exclusivity with efforts to reflect the larger society (class, race, gender). The Bar needed to address challenges to its exclusive rights of audience from both solicitors and employed barristers and decide whether to retaliate by permitting direct access, thereby compromising its claim to be a consulting profession. Solicitors had to reconcile their invocation of market principles against the Bar with their resistance to corporate conveyancing and multidisciplinary practices. Government had to restrain a demand-led legal aid scheme; practitioners and their associations sought to pressure the government to expand eligibility and raise remuneration rates.
Divisions within both branches so compromised self-regulation and governance that the government even threatened to deprive lawyers of those essential elements of professionalism.
These challenges have begun a transformation of the legal profession that will shape its evolution throughout the twenty-first century.
Product details
Edition:
1
Number of Pages:
752
Release Date:
2003-10-09
Publication Date:
2003-07-31
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
Languages:
Original:
English
ISBN10:
0198260334
ISBN13:
9780198260332
GPSR Manufacturer Reference:
Weight:
1280 g
Height:
161 cm
Width:
240 cm
Thickness:
44 cm
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