Every state has a rule proscribing nonlawyer investment in law firms. This sixty-plus-year-old prohibition has created an inefficient legal services market. Firms cannot access capital markets, limiting their opportunities for expansion, curtailing investments in technology and training, and hindering competition. Furthermore, every jurisdiction except the District of Columbia prohibits lawyers from entering into a business association with nonlawyers as partners or directors if the business provides legal services. These prohibitions against nonlawyer investment and participation in law firms have long hindered the legal profession with no signs of change. This Article advocates that these prohibitions be lifted. It discusses the source of...
Although many states have embraced the concept of limited liability for attorneys, approval is not u...
The Growth of Large Law Firms and Its Effect on the Legal Profession and Legal Education, Symposiu
Following the contraction in demand for law firms’ services during the Great Recession, “Big Law” wa...
Rules prohibiting nonlawyers from holding ownership or managerial interests in law firms remain on t...
Last year, a New York federal district court dismissed a lawsuit by Jacoby & Meyers LLP attacking a ...
For at least sixty years nonlawyers have been prohibited from offering their nonlegal talents in a b...
The Article debunks the highly publicized claim, within the academy and the legal profession, that t...
Could non-lawyers own law firms? According to a recent report by the Canadian Bar Association (CBA),...
Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm is part of the scholarly literature th...
This Article identifies and analyzes the de facto and de jure end of lawyers’ exclusivity over the p...
The goal of this Article is to examine the partnership model and advocate for a change in the Model ...
This article examines two principal hypotheses: Hypothesis 1: Law firm investments in clients dimini...
In this Article, Professor Munneke continues the debate over ethical rules governing lawyers\u27 pro...
The correspondence collected here represents an effort to start a conversation. Pending legislation ...
A Review of Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm by Marc Galanter and Thom...
Although many states have embraced the concept of limited liability for attorneys, approval is not u...
The Growth of Large Law Firms and Its Effect on the Legal Profession and Legal Education, Symposiu
Following the contraction in demand for law firms’ services during the Great Recession, “Big Law” wa...
Rules prohibiting nonlawyers from holding ownership or managerial interests in law firms remain on t...
Last year, a New York federal district court dismissed a lawsuit by Jacoby & Meyers LLP attacking a ...
For at least sixty years nonlawyers have been prohibited from offering their nonlegal talents in a b...
The Article debunks the highly publicized claim, within the academy and the legal profession, that t...
Could non-lawyers own law firms? According to a recent report by the Canadian Bar Association (CBA),...
Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm is part of the scholarly literature th...
This Article identifies and analyzes the de facto and de jure end of lawyers’ exclusivity over the p...
The goal of this Article is to examine the partnership model and advocate for a change in the Model ...
This article examines two principal hypotheses: Hypothesis 1: Law firm investments in clients dimini...
In this Article, Professor Munneke continues the debate over ethical rules governing lawyers\u27 pro...
The correspondence collected here represents an effort to start a conversation. Pending legislation ...
A Review of Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm by Marc Galanter and Thom...
Although many states have embraced the concept of limited liability for attorneys, approval is not u...
The Growth of Large Law Firms and Its Effect on the Legal Profession and Legal Education, Symposiu
Following the contraction in demand for law firms’ services during the Great Recession, “Big Law” wa...