An unprecedented account of social stratification within the US legal
profession.
How do race, class, gender, and law school status condition the career
trajectories of lawyers? And how do professionals then navigate these
parameters?
The Making of Lawyers' Careers provides an unprecedented account of
the last two decades of the legal profession in the US, offering a
data-backed look at the structure of the profession and the inequalities
that early-career lawyers face across race, gender, and class
distinctions. Starting in 2000, the authors collected over 10,000 survey
responses from more than 5,000 lawyers, following these lawyers through
the first twenty years of their careers. They also interviewed more than
two hundred lawyers and drew insights from their individual stories,
contextualizing data with theory and close attention to the features of
a market-driven legal profession.
Their findings show that lawyers' careers both reflect and reproduce
inequalities within society writ large. They also reveal how individuals
exercise agency despite these constraints.