The legal profession : what is wrong and how to fix it

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Where to find it

Law Library — 2nd Floor Collection (2nd floor)

Call Number
KF298 .K73 2013
Status
Available

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

Sheldon Krantz begins The Legal Profession: What Is Wrong and How to Fix It by saying that the legal profession is in trouble, and should be. He then covers what is wrong by describing the current state of the legal profession, the emergence of BigLaw, the changing nature of law practice, and the access to justice crisis. This is followed up by addressing what needs to be done and setting forth a specific agenda to address its deficiencies:

Make the legal profession more responsive to client and public service needs Resolve the access to justice crisis Involve law schools more directly in legal profession reform; and Create a new organization with a mandate to promote necessary changes in the legal profession on an ongoing basis

He points out both promising developments as well the forces resisting change and identifies ways to overcome resistance to change and to transform the legal profession into the noble calling it should be.

Contents

The legal profession is in trouble -- A brief profile of the legal profession today -- The emergence of biglaw -- The changing nature of other forms of law practice -- The access to justice crisis -- What needs to be done -- The need for law schools to assert leadership -- Can law schools afford to play this kind of leadership role? -- A new agenda for the legal profession -- Promising developments -- The impediments to change and ways to overcome them.

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