The UK Legal Services Act 2007 permits external financing and unlimited non-lawyer ownership of legal practices through the formation of Alternative Business Structures (ABSs). For many, the impact of this changed regulation on the ‘professional partnership’, as the dominant organisational form through which legal services are delivered, will be considerable. However, to date few studies have explored this empirically. This paper addresses this gap by examining organisational changes within ABSs to assess how far these firms have departed from the professional partnership model. Focusing upon the ABS population licensed by the Solicitors Regulation Authority between January 2012 and August 2015, the study findings show a continuum of organi...
Following the Legal Services Act 2007, which permitted the delivery of legal services through Altern...
The goal of this Article is to examine the partnership model and advocate for a change in the Model ...
Legal service markets and their professions are transforming through market liberalization, regulato...
The UK Legal Services Act 2007 permits external financing and unlimited non-lawyer ownership of lega...
Alternative Business Structure (ABS) law firms in the United Kingdom allow for non-lawyer owners and...
In addressing external and internal pressures, large legal Professional Service Firms (PSFs) in Aust...
When the Legal Services Act 2007 came into force , it was heralded as ushering in “important opportu...
In clinical legal education circles we tend to focus on the pedagogical aspects of our work. We enjo...
The Legal Services Act 2007 provided a framework for a liberalised marketplace for legal services. T...
The Nature of the Problem In this chapter I examine the tension between professionalism and business...
The size and scope of global law firms has made them difficult to encompass within a single regulato...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>Data collection comprises two parts, reflecting the ...
This paper examines the proposition that the traditional archetype of the professional partnership i...
In clinical legal education circles we tend to focus on the pedagogical aspects of our work. We enjo...
This thesis addresses the performance and delivery of professional legal services. Previous research...
Following the Legal Services Act 2007, which permitted the delivery of legal services through Altern...
The goal of this Article is to examine the partnership model and advocate for a change in the Model ...
Legal service markets and their professions are transforming through market liberalization, regulato...
The UK Legal Services Act 2007 permits external financing and unlimited non-lawyer ownership of lega...
Alternative Business Structure (ABS) law firms in the United Kingdom allow for non-lawyer owners and...
In addressing external and internal pressures, large legal Professional Service Firms (PSFs) in Aust...
When the Legal Services Act 2007 came into force , it was heralded as ushering in “important opportu...
In clinical legal education circles we tend to focus on the pedagogical aspects of our work. We enjo...
The Legal Services Act 2007 provided a framework for a liberalised marketplace for legal services. T...
The Nature of the Problem In this chapter I examine the tension between professionalism and business...
The size and scope of global law firms has made them difficult to encompass within a single regulato...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>Data collection comprises two parts, reflecting the ...
This paper examines the proposition that the traditional archetype of the professional partnership i...
In clinical legal education circles we tend to focus on the pedagogical aspects of our work. We enjo...
This thesis addresses the performance and delivery of professional legal services. Previous research...
Following the Legal Services Act 2007, which permitted the delivery of legal services through Altern...
The goal of this Article is to examine the partnership model and advocate for a change in the Model ...
Legal service markets and their professions are transforming through market liberalization, regulato...