Lawyers in Society: Comparative TheoriesRichard L. Abel, Philip Simon Coleman Lewis Beard Books, 1989 - 555 pages Contains comparative and theoretical essays on the legal profession around the world. |
Table des matières
27 | |
44 | |
Objects of Comparison | 51 |
Comparative Sociology of Legal Professions | 80 |
Categories of Producers | 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 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
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