The Popular Image of the American Lawyer: Some Thoughts on Its Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Intellectual Bases (original) (raw)

Lawyers as America's Governing Class: The Formation and Dissolution of the Original Understanding of the American Lawyer's Role

Russell Pearce

2001

View PDFchevron_right

On the Popular Image of the Lawyer: Reflections in a Dark Glass

Robert Post

California Law Review, 1987

View PDFchevron_right

The Cambridge History of Law in America

Christopher L Tomlins

2008

View PDFchevron_right

Simple Images and Complex Realities: English Lawyers and Their Relationship to Business and Politics, 1750-1950

David Sugarman

Law and History Review, 1993

View PDFchevron_right

Jonathan D. Sarna, “Orthodox Jewish Lawyer-Leaders in Nineteenth-Century America,” in Zev Eleff and Jacob J. Schacter, eds., Ennoble and Enable: Essays in Honor of Richard M. Joel (Jerusalem: Maggid, 2018), 361-370

Jonathan Sarna

View PDFchevron_right

Eighteenth-Century Lawyers and the Advent of the Professional Ethos

Penelope J Corfield

View PDFchevron_right

Book Review of A Nation Under Lawyers: How the Crisis in the Legal Profession is Transforming American Society, by Mary Ann Glendon

William LaPiana

1997

View PDFchevron_right

The Transformation of American Law, 1780-1860

David Sugarman

British journal of law and society, 1980

View PDFchevron_right

Lawyers and Virtues: A Review Essay of Mary Ann Glendon\u27s A Nation Under Lawyers: How the Crisis in the Legal Profession is Transforming American Society and Anthony T. Kronman\u27s The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession

Robert Cochran

2014

View PDFchevron_right

CorfieldPdf12 Eighteenth-Century Lawyers and the Advent of the Professional Ethos - full text

Penelope J Corfield

View PDFchevron_right

Cross Examining the Truthful Witness the Ideal Within the Central Moral Tradition of Lawyering

robert lawry

1996

View PDFchevron_right

EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY LAWYERS AND THE ADVENT OF THE PROFESSIONAL ETHOS 1

Penelope J Corfield

View PDFchevron_right

History of First Century American Legal Education: A Revisionist Perspective, The

Charles McManis

Wash. ULQ, 1981

View PDFchevron_right

Making the Modern American Legal Profession, 1969–Present

Michael Ariens

2019

View PDFchevron_right

Roger K. Newman, editor, The Yale Biographical Dictionary of American Law, New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2009. Pp. xiii + 622. $65.00 (ISBN 978-0-300-11300-6)

Steven Macias

Law and History Review, 2010

View PDFchevron_right

THE HISTORY OF THE LEGAL PROFESSION -'A LIGHT-HEARTED FESTIVE SEASON ARTICLE.' OPENING REMARKS

Johann Scheepers

View PDFchevron_right

Lawyers in society: a celebration of the work of Philip Lewis and his legacy

Peter Sanderson

International Journal of the Legal Profession

View PDFchevron_right

Comments on David Rabban, Law’s History: Late Nineteenth-Century American Legal Scholarship and the Transatlantic Turn to History

Assaf Likhovski

Jerusalem Review of Legal Studies , 2010

View PDFchevron_right

Reflections on the 40th Anniversary of Hurst's Growth of American Law

Aviam Soifer

Law <html_ent glyph="@amp;" ascii="&"/> Social Inquiry, 1992

View PDFchevron_right

Towards a Cultural History of Lawyers. In: W. Wesley Pue and David Sugarman (eds.) Lawyers and Vampires: Cultural Histories of Lawyers (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2003) pp. 1-24. Co-authored with W. Wesley Pue

David Sugarman

Lawyers and Vampires: Cultural Histories of Lawyers, 2003

View PDFchevron_right

Nothing New Under the Sun: How the Legal Profession's Twenty-First Century Challenges Resemble Those of the Turn of the Twentieth Century

Russell Pearce

Fordham Urban Law Journal, 2016

View PDFchevron_right

Review of “The Transformation of American Law, 1780—1860,” by Morton J. Horwitz

Sheldon Novick

1977

View PDFchevron_right

A Special Relationship? American Influences on English Legal Education, c. 1870-1965

David Sugarman

International Journal of the Legal Profession, 2011

View PDFchevron_right

Review Essay: M.J. Horwitz, The Transformation of American Law, 1780-1860

David Sugarman

British Journal of Law and Society, 1980

View PDFchevron_right

Transforming a Field: The Critical Tradition in American Legal History

David Tanenhaus

Reviews in American History, 2010

View PDFchevron_right

Lawyers, Republicanism, and the Federalist Periodical Essay in The Port Folio

Richard Squibbs

Huntington Library Quarterly, 2012

View PDFchevron_right

The Lawyer as Catalyst of Social Change

James E. Moliterno

77 Fordham Law Review 1559 1590, 2009

View PDFchevron_right

Historical Debates in US Legal Education

Juny Montoya

View PDFchevron_right

KNOW THE LAW: A HISTORY OF LEGAL SPECIALIZATION

Michael Ariens

View PDFchevron_right

Beyond Ignorance and Complacency: Robert Stevens' Journey Through Lawyers and the Courts

David Sugarman

International Journal of the Legal Profession, 2009

View PDFchevron_right

America’s Lawyer-Presidents: From Law Office to Oval Office, by Norman Gross (ed.) (book review)

Matt Bewig

View PDFchevron_right

Foreword to W. Wesley Pue, Lawyers' Empire: Legal Professions and Cultural Authority, 1780–1950 (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2016)

David Sugarman

W. Wesley Pue, Lawyers’ Empire, Legal Professions and Cultural Authority, 1780–1950 (Vancouver, UBC Press), 2016

View PDFchevron_right

Lawyers as Strangers and Friends: A Reply to Professor Sammons

Robert Cochran

1995

View PDFchevron_right

The Central Moral Tradition of Lawyering

robert lawry

Hofstra Law Review, 1990

View PDFchevron_right

Lawyers and the Vital Relationship between the Past and the Present

Pietro Costa

German Law Journal

View PDFchevron_right