The limited academic literature on regulation of the legal profession argues that law societies should further regulate large law firms. This article takes a countervailing position and submits that as a result of complex regulatory-like infrastructure that already exists within large firms, the law society has a weak incentive to regulate these firms. Large law firms develop and maintain their own codes of conduct and internal monitoring systems. While the rules of professional conduct serve as a baseline regulatory regime, large law firms have strong incentives to implement as or more stringent rules and relatively weak incentives to capture the law society
Globalization has fundamentally accelerated and altered business transactions. The search for low la...
This Article focuses on those who regulate U.S. laywers. The Article argues that the lawyers who hea...
Liability insurers often informally regulate the behavior of their insureds through the underwriting...
The limited academic literature on regulation of the legal profession argues that law societies shou...
This Article addresses self-regulation in the legal industry. Lawyers have traditionally resisted t...
The Article debunks the highly publicized claim, within the academy and the legal profession, that t...
The size and scope of global law firms has made them difficult to encompass within a single regulato...
The regulation of solicitors in England and Wales has undergone great change in the wake of the Lega...
The Growth of Large Law Firms and Its Effect on the Legal Profession and Legal Education, Symposiu
Despite the growing number of studies of professionals in organizations, surprisingly little attenti...
Law firms have grown from hundreds of lawyers to thousands of lawyers, and the conventional wisdom i...
The Growth of Large Law Firms and Its Effect on the Legal Profession and Legal Education, Symposiu
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
textabstractThis article starts by discussing a number of public interest explanations for regulatin...
Globalization has fundamentally accelerated and altered business transactions. The search for low la...
This Article focuses on those who regulate U.S. laywers. The Article argues that the lawyers who hea...
Liability insurers often informally regulate the behavior of their insureds through the underwriting...
The limited academic literature on regulation of the legal profession argues that law societies shou...
This Article addresses self-regulation in the legal industry. Lawyers have traditionally resisted t...
The Article debunks the highly publicized claim, within the academy and the legal profession, that t...
The size and scope of global law firms has made them difficult to encompass within a single regulato...
The regulation of solicitors in England and Wales has undergone great change in the wake of the Lega...
The Growth of Large Law Firms and Its Effect on the Legal Profession and Legal Education, Symposiu
Despite the growing number of studies of professionals in organizations, surprisingly little attenti...
Law firms have grown from hundreds of lawyers to thousands of lawyers, and the conventional wisdom i...
The Growth of Large Law Firms and Its Effect on the Legal Profession and Legal Education, Symposiu
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
textabstractThis article starts by discussing a number of public interest explanations for regulatin...
Globalization has fundamentally accelerated and altered business transactions. The search for low la...
This Article focuses on those who regulate U.S. laywers. The Article argues that the lawyers who hea...
Liability insurers often informally regulate the behavior of their insureds through the underwriting...