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  • Revolution and the Making of the Contemporary Legal Profession: England, France, and the United States

    Revolution and the Making of the Contemporary Legal Profession by Burrage, Michael;

    England, France, and the United States

    Sorozatcím: Oxford Socio-Legal Studies;

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    A termék adatai:

    • Kiadó OUP Oxford
    • Megjelenés dátuma 2006. március 2.

    • ISBN 9780199282982
    • Kötéstípus Keménykötés
    • Terjedelem696 oldal
    • Méret 242x163x44 mm
    • Súly 1191 g
    • Nyelv angol
    • 0

    Kategóriák

    Rövid leírás:

    Examining the social revolutions in France, the United States, and England during industrialization this book looks at the different ways in which social upheaval has prompted radical divergences in the organisation and regulation of the legal profession.

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    Hosszú leírás:

    The revolutions of France, the United States, and England each inspired dreams of creating legal institutions that did not depend on specialist intermediaries, and, in different ways, provoked attacks on the existing rules and government of the legal profession more widespread and severe than at any other time in their history. These dreams came to naught and, sooner or later, the professions recovered, but their revolutionary experiences nevertheless had a lasting impact on their subsequent organization, and help to explain why three previously convergent professions should diverge as their societies industrialised.

    The social upheaval of industrialization may also help to explain many of their peculiarities down to the present day: why, for instance, French advocates imposed such strict ethical obligations on themselves, from which they were only released by the state in 1992, why American lawyers should be the first to be at ease in the market, but faced intractable problems of professional self-government, why two professions should emerge in England, both with a high degree of self-government, and both long indifferent to law schools and to the market for legal services.

    Since lawyers were the first occupation to organize as a profession, this insightful comparative inquiry then asks what their experience might tell us about other organized occupations in these three societies, and the difference between their educational institutions, their division of labour, their civil societies and lesser forms of government, and about the ways they have been stratified and formed classes.

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    Tartalomjegyzék:

    Investigating a Fateful Encounter
    Utopian Ideals and Revolutionary Practice
    Two Contested and Honorific Concepts - Revolution and Profession
    Why Do Professionals Behave the Way They Do?
    What Have They Actually Done, or Tried To Do?
    The Framework of the Investigation, the Evidence and its Presentation
    Ideal and Myth in the Lives of French Advocates
    The Formation of a State and of a Profession
    Reconsidering the 'Triumph of the Professionals'
    ...And the 'Demise' of Advocates Before the Revolution
    The Original Revolutionary Design: Act I
    Terror and Thermidor: Act II
    Napoleon's Selections, Innovations, and Synthesis: Act III
    Return of the Advocates and Their Orders
    Why was the Profession Destroyed?
    Cycles of Constitutionalism, Repression, and Revolution
    Bourbon Beginnings 1815 - 30
    Orleanist Reprise 1830 - 48
    Napoleanic Coda 1848 - 70
    The Original Revolutionary Design Re-Enacted, Paris 1871
    Marx's Nightmare and Tocqueville's Theatre
    A Protracted and Reluctant Return to Normalcy
    Schools, Stage, and Invisible Barriers
    A Jurisdiction Defined by Incompatibilités and Plaidoiries
    Alter Ego Tries to Change Advocates' Behaviour
    Three Threats to Absolute Independence
    An Anachronistic Sense of Humour
    Myth and Irony in the Career of a Super-Profession
    Practitioners vs. Legislators and Professors in the United States
    A Journey from Utopia Back to England - Lawyers in the Colonies
    The Revolution Controlled, for the Most Part
    The Massachusetts Electorate Interprets the Revolution
    Other States, Other Interpretations
    Removing Restrictions on Legal Practice
    The Collapse of Bar Associations and the Philadelphia Exception
    Elected Judges and Codes Complete Americanization
    Was it Capitalism, the Frontier or the Revolution?
    Three Stages of Reconstruction
    What had Changed During the Interregnum?
    Practitioners vs. Professors and Legislators
    Practitioners Search for an Effective Form of Government
    An Undependable Ally: the Judiciary
    Aother Undependable Ally: the Law Schools
    Explaining Unethical and Innovative Behaviour
    An Asymmetrical and Ever-Expanding Jurisdiction
    How a 'Body' Became a Ladder
    Failure or Success? Some Clues from Philadelphia
    Learned Friends and Gentlemen in England - Beneficiaries of the Glorious Revolution
    Confused Candidates in a Marketplace
    Strange Bodies - the Inns Before the Revolution
    The Trauma and the Tremor
    Searching the Inns and the Courts
    Explaining the Failure of the Revolutionary Movement
    An Infrastructure of Absolutism is Created by Writs
    ...And Destroyed by 'the Greatest Thing Done by the English Nation'
    The Medieval Corporation then Advances into the Modern World
    Pupillages and Articles
    Hedges, Honour and Markets
    Little Republics, Little Commonwealths
    Spinning Webs of Mutual Restraint
    Status Rivals and Allies
    Industrialization, Democracy, and the Unwritten Constitution
    Is Professional Power an Adequate Explanation?
    Thatcher and a Turbulent Tercentenary
    The Discrediting of Self-Governing Communities
    Comparing Professions and Societies
    The Kinship of Old Regime Lawyers
    Facing Common Revolutionary Aspirations
    Diverging Paths into the Modern World
    An Unmistakeable and Inconvenient Conclusion
    An Ancien Régime Guide to French Modernity
    A Slice of the American Dream
    M'Learned Friends Illustrate Englishness

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