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Lawyer Specialization - Managing the Professional Paradox


Richard Moorhead


Centre for Ethics and Law, Faculty of Laws, UCL London


Law & Policy, Vol. 32, Issue 2, pp. 226-259, April 2010

Abstract:     
This article explores a series of paradoxes exposed by specialization within the legal profession. It will argue that while the existing literature rightly identifies specialization as posing potential challenges to coherence, legitimacy, and professional ethics, it fails to grapple with the relationship between professional competence and specialization. In exploring this relationship, three paradoxes are articulated. The first is that specialization is both a necessary element in the development of professionalism and a threat to it. The second is the normative ambiguity of specialization: specialization is capable of giving rise to both benefits and detriments. The third paradox is the profession's response to this ambiguity. It will be argued that the profession's approach is incoherent in public interest terms and can be best explained as part of a desire to protect its members' interests and its collective identity over the public interest in competence. These arguments are made in the context of a series of three empirical studies of specialists and nonspecialists in legal aid practice in England and Wales. The evidence is worrying enough to suggest significant concerns about the quality and indeed legitimacy of the professional qualification as a general warrant of competence. The implications for institutionalizing specialization within the legal profession are discussed.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 34

Accepted Paper Series


Date posted: March 22, 2010  

Suggested Citation

Moorhead, Richard Lewis, Lawyer Specialization - Managing the Professional Paradox. Law & Policy, Vol. 32, Issue 2, pp. 226-259, April 2010. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1571805 or http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9930.2009.00315.x

Contact Information

Richard Lewis Moorhead (Contact Author)
Centre for Ethics and Law, Faculty of Laws, UCL London ( email )
London WC1E OEG
United Kingdom
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