Most commentators would agree that large law firms have outgrown collegial management and self-regulation. Yet lawyers generally have been slow to recognize the benefits of bureaucratic management, and traditionally have resisted and lamented the move toward more bureaucratic forms. Many lawyers view the infrastructure of bureaucratic management - that is, formal policies and procedures and specialized managerial personnel - as necessarily undermining professional ethics and individual accountability within firms. This article questions the empirical basis for such concerns. I argue that the fear that centralized management controls will undermine individual accountability rests on an implicit comparison to a nostalgic, collegial ideal, in ...
In this Article, Professor Munneke continues the debate over ethical rules governing lawyers\u27 pro...
For generations, the legal profession has assumed that only individual lawyers practice law. Ethical...
Every state has a rule proscribing nonlawyer investment in law firms. This sixty-plus-year-old prohi...
Most commentators would agree that large law firms have outgrown collegial management and self-regul...
The academic literature on large law firms emphasizes the limited authority of professional managers...
The Article debunks the highly publicized claim, within the academy and the legal profession, that t...
Larry Mitchell\u27s book describes the movement toward share price maximization by corporate manager...
Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm is part of the scholarly literature th...
Today, lawyers must regard the practice of law as a business, inasmuch as they earn their livelihood...
Large law firms in the United States make up only a small proportion of the bar, but they are consid...
The Growth of Large Law Firms and Its Effect on the Legal Profession and Legal Education, Symposiu
Competition between lawyers and accountants is not a new concept. At various times during the past c...
This Article offers both a way to understand emerging developments in the regulation of the legal pr...
In the changing landscape of law practice—where law firm profits are threatened by such changes as i...
The limited academic literature on regulation of the legal profession argues that law societies shou...
In this Article, Professor Munneke continues the debate over ethical rules governing lawyers\u27 pro...
For generations, the legal profession has assumed that only individual lawyers practice law. Ethical...
Every state has a rule proscribing nonlawyer investment in law firms. This sixty-plus-year-old prohi...
Most commentators would agree that large law firms have outgrown collegial management and self-regul...
The academic literature on large law firms emphasizes the limited authority of professional managers...
The Article debunks the highly publicized claim, within the academy and the legal profession, that t...
Larry Mitchell\u27s book describes the movement toward share price maximization by corporate manager...
Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm is part of the scholarly literature th...
Today, lawyers must regard the practice of law as a business, inasmuch as they earn their livelihood...
Large law firms in the United States make up only a small proportion of the bar, but they are consid...
The Growth of Large Law Firms and Its Effect on the Legal Profession and Legal Education, Symposiu
Competition between lawyers and accountants is not a new concept. At various times during the past c...
This Article offers both a way to understand emerging developments in the regulation of the legal pr...
In the changing landscape of law practice—where law firm profits are threatened by such changes as i...
The limited academic literature on regulation of the legal profession argues that law societies shou...
In this Article, Professor Munneke continues the debate over ethical rules governing lawyers\u27 pro...
For generations, the legal profession has assumed that only individual lawyers practice law. Ethical...
Every state has a rule proscribing nonlawyer investment in law firms. This sixty-plus-year-old prohi...