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The New Place of Corporate Law Firms in the Structuring of Elite Legal Careers
For more than a century, a partnership position in a large corporate law firm has almost universally been held out as the singular mark of success for those with a law degree. We find that despite significant transformations in the profession, including dramatic expansion in size and the opening of...
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Published in: | Law & social inquiry 2020-05, Vol.45 (2), p.339-371 |
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description | For more than a century, a partnership position in a large corporate law firm has almost universally been held out as the singular mark of success for those with a law degree. We find that despite significant transformations in the profession, including dramatic expansion in size and the opening of corporate law positions to women, minorities, and the graduates of lower-ranked schools, the powerful and prestigious positions of corporate law partners remain largely reserved for those with the most elite credentials and other characteristics—male, white, wife at home—that defined law firm partners before the great period of change. By examining the continuity and change in the sorting of legal elites, we find evidence that the experience of a position in a corporate law firm now bestows advantages even for those who do not make partner. What was once deemed a failure—not making partner—is now a source of valued capital that leads to careers in in-house positions, boutique firms, the federal government, and a host of nonequity partner positions. We draw on thirteen years of lawyers’ career histories from the After the JD study, using the techniques of sequence analysis and qualitative interviews. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1017/lsi.2019.62 |
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source | Criminology Collection; International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Nexis UK; Social Science Premium Collection; Politics Collection; Sociology Collection; PAIS Index; Cambridge University Press; Sociological Abstracts |
subjects | Attorneys Careers Credentials Elites Federal government Law Law firms Law schools Minority & ethnic groups Minority groups Schools Women |
title | The New Place of Corporate Law Firms in the Structuring of Elite Legal Careers |
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