Introduction: The Legal Profession
Daniel Newman
Chapter 1: Coloring, Highlights, and Pompadours
Twenty-five years from Fragmenting Professionalism and Bleached Out Lawyering
Swethaa Ballakrishnen and Sydney Leigh Martin, Esq.
Chapter 2: Toward a New Legal Common Sense
Kate Galloway
Chapter 3: Pierre Bourdieu’s The Logic of Practice
Understanding the Working Practices of Lawyers
James Thornton
Chapter 4: The replacement of the legal profession: Vilhelm Aubert’s theory and heritage in the sociology of the legal profession
Ole Hammerslev
Chapter 5: ‘Two versions of the American Dream’: Wellbeing and unhappiness in the law school and legal profession: The work of Lawrence Krieger and Kennon Sheldon
Neil Graffin
Chapter 6: Professor John Flood – Barristers’ Clerks: The Law’s Middlemen
Elaine Freer
Chapter 7: Are Poor People’s Lawyers still in Transition?
Assessing the relevancy of Jack Katz’s work four decades on
Emma Cooke
Chapter 8: (In)visible Legal Careers: Eliane Junqueira's Kaleidoscopic View of Latin America
Maria Adelaida Ceballos-Bedoya
Chapter 9: Four Decades of Future
Assessing Susskind's predictions for the future of legal services
Oliver Wannell
Chapter 10: Feminist Judging in the ‘Real World’: From theory to practice through the eyes of judges
Lucy Welsh
Chapter 11: A Story of a Globalist Palestinian Jurist
Osayd I. Awawda, Ihssan A. Madbouh, Hendam J. Rjoub, Mazan M. Zaro
Chapter 12: Criminal Defence Lawyers in England and Wales: Critiquing Criminal Practice
Daniel Newman
Chapter 13: Gender and Commitment in the Legal Profession: Revisiting Sommerlad and Sanderson
Diane Atherton-Blenkiron
Chapter 14: Judicial Independence in an Authoritarian Regime: The Case of Contemporary Spain (José J. Toharia)
Stefanie Lemke
Chapter 15: Lawyers who want to make the world a better place – Scheingold and Sarat’s Something to Believe in: Politics, Professionalism, and Cause Lawyering
Alex Batesmith
Chapter 16: Studying family mediators in a changing justice system
Rachael Blakey
Chapter 17: Beyond Critique: The Pragmatic Turn in the Study of Social-Change Litigation
John Bliss
Afterword: Leading Works in the Legal Profession
Jess Mant