The Re-Landscaping of the Legal Profession: Large Law Firms and Professional Re-Regulation

Current Sociology vol 59, no 4, 2012

23 Pages Posted: 2 Aug 2010 Last revised: 22 Nov 2015

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John Flood

Griffith University; Queensland University of Technology; Centre for Blockchain Technologies

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Abstract

The recent history of the legal profession is presented as one where the re-regulation of the profession, as epitomized in the Legal Services Act 2007, has placed the large law firm at the centre as a site of regulation in its own right. The legal profession has redefined its professional character from that of autonomous producers to employed lawyers who now exercise discretion within tightly constrained corporate limits. This is paralleled by the move away from individualistic codes of conduct towards entity-based regulation.

(This is Version 3 of this paper and has a different emphasis from Version 1 which also available at SSRN. It is for this reason I have left both versions on SSRN.)

Keywords: ethics, regulation, globalization, legal profession, large law firms

JEL Classification: J44

Suggested Citation

Flood, John A., The Re-Landscaping of the Legal Profession: Large Law Firms and Professional Re-Regulation. Current Sociology vol 59, no 4, 2012, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1650760

John A. Flood (Contact Author)

Griffith University ( email )

Nathan campus
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Australia

HOME PAGE: http://https://experts.griffith.edu.au/18783-john-flood

Queensland University of Technology ( email )

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Centre for Blockchain Technologies ( email )

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