This Article describes and explains the influence of global change on American public interest law over the past quarter-century. It suggests that contemporary public interest lawyers, unlike their civil rights-era predecessors, operate in a professional environment integrated into the global political economy in ways that have profound implications for whom they represent, where they advocate, and what sources of law they invoke. The Article provides a preliminary map of this professional environment by tracing the impact of three defining transnational processes on the development of the modem public interest law system: the increasing magnitude and changing composition of immigration, the development and expansion of free market policies...
American public law scholarship views law as a purposive instrument for the achievement of democrati...
The rise of post-national entities, such as the institutions of the European Union and of free-trade...
This article takes an empirical approach to the issue of how the U.S. legal services market is respo...
This Article is an account of profound changes in the organization and practice of public interest l...
Public interest law has become increasingly globalized in the post-Cold War era, incorporated in nat...
<p>In recent years, “public interest law” (PIL) has become a frequent component in conve...
Globalization, characterized by the inter-connectivity of persons, states, and non-state actors on a...
The public interest law movement is at the end of its first generation—part of a broader changing of...
The increasingly international reach of law owes part of its momentum to individual lawyers and law ...
Even in a climate of increased cooperation among regulatory authorities, jurisdictional conflict rem...
The article examines the international activities of various segments of the U.S. legal profession...
In this Article, the author examines ways that legal aid advocacy organizations in the U.S. can util...
This article details the effects that recent North American economic integration has had on public i...
This article explores the position of law vis-à-vis the complex phenomenon of globalization. It begi...
This article contributes a new perspective to existing scholarship on internationalization of the ...
American public law scholarship views law as a purposive instrument for the achievement of democrati...
The rise of post-national entities, such as the institutions of the European Union and of free-trade...
This article takes an empirical approach to the issue of how the U.S. legal services market is respo...
This Article is an account of profound changes in the organization and practice of public interest l...
Public interest law has become increasingly globalized in the post-Cold War era, incorporated in nat...
<p>In recent years, “public interest law” (PIL) has become a frequent component in conve...
Globalization, characterized by the inter-connectivity of persons, states, and non-state actors on a...
The public interest law movement is at the end of its first generation—part of a broader changing of...
The increasingly international reach of law owes part of its momentum to individual lawyers and law ...
Even in a climate of increased cooperation among regulatory authorities, jurisdictional conflict rem...
The article examines the international activities of various segments of the U.S. legal profession...
In this Article, the author examines ways that legal aid advocacy organizations in the U.S. can util...
This article details the effects that recent North American economic integration has had on public i...
This article explores the position of law vis-à-vis the complex phenomenon of globalization. It begi...
This article contributes a new perspective to existing scholarship on internationalization of the ...
American public law scholarship views law as a purposive instrument for the achievement of democrati...
The rise of post-national entities, such as the institutions of the European Union and of free-trade...
This article takes an empirical approach to the issue of how the U.S. legal services market is respo...