This comment will address one important aspect of Professor Schiltz\u27s broader argument, namely his contention that the legal profession is afflicted with widespread job dissatisfaction. More specifically, Schiltz makes the following assertions about lawyers\u27 unhappiness with their professional lives: (1) dissatisfaction is high; (2) dissatisfaction is increasing; and (3) dissatisfaction is highest among lawyers in private practice in large firms.\u27 Using data from a recent survey of Chicago attorneys as well as other studies of lawyers\u27 job satisfaction, including those cited by Schiltz, I will address each of these points in turn
The findings in Lawyer Distress are illuminating and, as the authors of thisvery important study i...
This is an excerpt from How Lawyer’s Lose Their Way: A Profession Fails Its Creative Minds. Profess...
The core of Schiltz\u27s argument with which I most disagree is that large firms are all alike, or, ...
Recent literature commonly reports US lawyers as disheartened and discontented, but more than two do...
[According to the authors of this article, the growing unhappiness of law- yers, particularly young ...
Will young lawyers truly be happier and more fulfiled if they can restrain their appetite for money?...
It took courage for Professor Patrick Schiltz to write the article that opens this symposium issue o...
Ills that beset our profession are addressed by Professor Patrick Schiltz in the alert he sounds in ...
In the day-to-day business of legal education there is remarkably little evidence that we are aware ...
This is the first theory-guided empirical research seeking to identify the correlates and contributo...
It took courage for Professor Patrick Schiltz to write the article that opens this symposium issue o...
There were 2,750 young lawyers, 1.8 percent of all young attorneys in the ABA, who responded to the ...
It is more than a mild irony that anti-discrimination law fails lawyers in particular. This article ...
Does anyone actually know whether we produce better lawyers now than in the past? So asked Professor...
abstract: This paper discusses the levels of job satisfaction amongst practicing lawyers, with a dis...
The findings in Lawyer Distress are illuminating and, as the authors of thisvery important study i...
This is an excerpt from How Lawyer’s Lose Their Way: A Profession Fails Its Creative Minds. Profess...
The core of Schiltz\u27s argument with which I most disagree is that large firms are all alike, or, ...
Recent literature commonly reports US lawyers as disheartened and discontented, but more than two do...
[According to the authors of this article, the growing unhappiness of law- yers, particularly young ...
Will young lawyers truly be happier and more fulfiled if they can restrain their appetite for money?...
It took courage for Professor Patrick Schiltz to write the article that opens this symposium issue o...
Ills that beset our profession are addressed by Professor Patrick Schiltz in the alert he sounds in ...
In the day-to-day business of legal education there is remarkably little evidence that we are aware ...
This is the first theory-guided empirical research seeking to identify the correlates and contributo...
It took courage for Professor Patrick Schiltz to write the article that opens this symposium issue o...
There were 2,750 young lawyers, 1.8 percent of all young attorneys in the ABA, who responded to the ...
It is more than a mild irony that anti-discrimination law fails lawyers in particular. This article ...
Does anyone actually know whether we produce better lawyers now than in the past? So asked Professor...
abstract: This paper discusses the levels of job satisfaction amongst practicing lawyers, with a dis...
The findings in Lawyer Distress are illuminating and, as the authors of thisvery important study i...
This is an excerpt from How Lawyer’s Lose Their Way: A Profession Fails Its Creative Minds. Profess...
The core of Schiltz\u27s argument with which I most disagree is that large firms are all alike, or, ...