Franchise Law Firms and the Transformation of Personal Legal Services

Franchise Law Firms and the Transformation of Personal Legal Services

Author: Jerry Van Hoy

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA

Published: 1997-08-26

Total Pages: 169

ISBN-13: 0313035326

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As lawyers, legal scholars, and academics throughout the social sciences debate the future of legal work and the legal profession itself, they turn their attention inevitably to the rise of the franchise law firms. Founded in response to the changing market for legal services, franchise law firms have grown dramatically in recent years, but at what cost to clients and lawyers alike? This book focuses on how professional organizations (and the related work experience) are influenced by economics and the way various firms have excelled by mass producing a basic menu of services—by placing their offices at strategic locations, hiring inexperienced new law school graduates, and using television and other hard-sell means to attract clients. Van Hoy's impeccable sociological research, presented in a clear, readable, anecdotal style, will be fascinating and useful reading, not only for members of the legal profession and their academic colleagues, but also for aspiring lawyers and their future clients. Van Hoy shows that franchise law firms are a competitive innovation in the market for personal legal services—an innovation that has served to standardize lawyers' work and to dehumanize lawyers themselves. Precisely because the work of attorneys can be standardized and mass produced, a finding that may astonish some and dismay others, attorneys may be even more alienated from their chosen profession than their clients suspect. Van Hoy analyzes these matters and captures the broader context in which prepackaged firms operate; indeed, he compares franchised attorneys to lawyers in different types of firms who are also competing for the same business. Van Hoy is convinced that many attorneys are not only alienated but are ripe for unionization. He shows that collegiality no longer insulates attorneys from the pressures and dissatisfactions of the outside world, a research finding that in itself may seriously challenge prevailing viewpoints and shake confidence in the belief that legal work is not just a profession, but also a calling.


Franchise Law Firms and the Transformation of Personal Legal Services

Franchise Law Firms and the Transformation of Personal Legal Services

Author: Jerry Van Hoy

Publisher:

Published: 1997

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Founded in response to the changing market for legal services, franchise law firms have grown dramatically in recent years, but at what cost to clients and lawyers alike? This book focuses on how legal services are influenced by market pressures and the way various law firms have excelled by mass producing a basic "menu" of services - by placing their offices at strategic locations, hiring inexperienced but less expensive new law school graduates, and using television and other hard-sell means to attract clients. Van Hoy's impeccable research, presented in a clear style, is fascinating and useful reading, not only for members of the legal profession and legal scholars, but also for aspiring lawyers and their future clients.


Lawyers in the Dock

Lawyers in the Dock

Author: Richard L. Abel

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2011-05-12

Total Pages: 584

ISBN-13: 0199772878

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"Six detailed accounts of New York lawyers disciplined for neglect, overcharging, and excessive zeal"--Provided by publisher.


Lawyers on Trial

Lawyers on Trial

Author: Richard L. Abel

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2010-12-17

Total Pages: 514

ISBN-13: 0199826498

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Lawyer misconduct affects many people: clients, adversaries, opposing counsel, judges, the legal profession, and society at large. The records of disciplinary proceedings offer a penetrating, and largely ignored, perspective on how lawyers misbehave. Because the lawyers' professional lives are at stake, the factual records are extraordinarily detailed and the lawyers surprisingly open about their motivations and justifications. In Lawyers on Trial, Richard L. Abel presents the stories of ten California lawyers who broke the rules: hiring an ex-cop to chase ambulances, flouting fee limitations in medical malpractice cases, creating a fictitious company and impersonating non-existent people in order to appropriate Sega's computer games, a former California Real Estate Commissioner defrauding developers and financiers, helping a represented co-defendant negotiate a plea without his lawyer's participation or knowledge, and defying a judge's sealing order and his own client's wishes for closure in order to champion the "defenseless" and "oppressed" and protect "widows and children." The book begins by showing how nearly a century of political struggle over self-regulation shapes the way the disciplinary system selects and processes cases and concludes by canvassing reforms that could improve the performance of the legal profession. Lawyers on Trial will be invaluable for those contemplating law school, law students and teachers of professional responsibility, continuing legal education classes, lawyers encountering ethical dilemmas in their practice or trying to understand misbehaving colleagues, members of the public thinking of retaining a lawyer, and clients dealing with their own lawyers.


The Vanishing American Lawyer

The Vanishing American Lawyer

Author: Thomas D. Morgan

Publisher:

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 260

ISBN-13: 0199737738

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Over 4,000 lawyers lost their positions at major American law firms in 2008 and 2009. In The Vanishing American Lawyer, Professor Thomas Morgan discusses the legal profession and the need for both law students and lawyers to adapt to the needs and expectations of clients in the future. The world needs people who understand institutions that create laws and how to access those institutions' works, but lawyers are no longer part of a profession that is uniquely qualified to advise on a broad range of distinctly legal questions. Clients will need advisors who are more specialized than many lawyers are today and who have more expertise in non-legal issues. Many of today's lawyers do not have a special ability to provide such services. While American lawyers have been hesitant to change the ways they can improve upon meeting client needs, lawyers in other countries, notably Great Britain and Australia, have been better at adapting. Law schools must also recognize the world their students will face and prepare them to operate successfully within it. Professor Morgan warns that lawyers must adapt to new client needs and expectations. The term "professional" should be applied to individuals who deserve praise for skilled and selfless efforts, but this term may lead to occupational suicide if it becomes a justification for not seeing and adapting to the world ahead.


Crossing Boundaries

Crossing Boundaries

Author: Austin Sarat

Publisher: Northwestern University Press

Published: 1998-09-02

Total Pages: 341

ISBN-13: 0810114399

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Perhaps no idea is more emblematic of the field of law and society than crossing boundaries. From the founding of the Law and Society Association in the early 1960s, participating scholars aspired to create a field that crossed boundaries in at least two senses: by undertaking research that questioned and often bridged traditional methodological and disciplinary divisions, and by using nontraditional approaches to explore the interconnections between law and its social context. These essays reflect both aspirations.


Access to Justice

Access to Justice

Author: Rebecca L. Sanderfur

Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing

Published: 2009-03-23

Total Pages: 288

ISBN-13: 1848552424

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Around the world, access to justice enjoys an energetic and passionate resurgence as an object both of scholarly inquiry and political contest, as both a social movement and a value commitment motivating study and action. This work evidences a deeper engagement with social theory than past generations of scholarship.


Stanford Law Review: Volume 63, Issue 2 - January 2011

Stanford Law Review: Volume 63, Issue 2 - January 2011

Author: Stanford Law Review

Publisher: Quid Pro Books

Published: 2011-02-24

Total Pages: 306

ISBN-13: 1610270495

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One of the most-read law journals adds a true ebook edition to its worldwide distribution, becoming the first general interest law review to do so. This current issue of the Stanford Law Review contains studies of law, economics, and social policy by such recognized scholars as Kenneth Bamberger, Deirdre Mulligan, Judge Richard Posner, Albert Yoon, Cynthia Estland, and Norman Spaulding. Volume 63, Issue 2's contents are: "Privacy on the Books and on the Ground," by Kenneth A. Bamberger & Deirdre K. Mulligan "What Judges Think of the Quality of Legal Representation," by Richard A. Posner & Albert H. Yoon "Just the Facts: The Case for Workplace Transparency," by Cynthia Estlund Essay, "Independence and Experimentalism in the Department of Justice," by Norman W. Spaulding Note, "The 'Benefit' of Spying: Defining the Boundaries of Economic Espionage under the Economic Espionage Act of 1996" In the new ebook edition, the footnotes, graphs, and tables of contents (including those for individual articles) are fully linked, properly scaled, and functional; the original note numbering is retained; and the issue is properly formatted.


In the Interests of Justice

In the Interests of Justice

Author: Deborah L. Rhode

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2003-04-10

Total Pages: 283

ISBN-13: 0195165543

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A past president of the Association of American Law Schools and senior counsel for the House Judiciary Committee during Clinton's impeachment proceedings, Rhode brings an insider's knowledge to the labyrinthine complexities of how the law works, or fails to work, for most Americans and often for lawyers themselves. She sheds much light on problems with the adversary system, the commercialization of practice, bar disciplinary processes, race and gender bias, and legal education.


Lawyers in Society

Lawyers in Society

Author: Philip Simon Coleman Lewis

Publisher: Beard Books

Published: 1988

Total Pages: 424

ISBN-13: 1587982641

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Essays describing the legal profession in the common law world.