Sunday, June 13, 2010

The Vanishing American Lawyer?

The Vanishing American Lawyer is an interesting new book weighing in on the future of the profession.

Authored by George Washington University Law Professor Thomas Morgan, the book discusses -- amongst many topics -- two items that have been frequent fodder in this blog: The the lag time that American law firms are exhibiting in adapting to the changing global legal climate, as well as the irresponsibly slow reaction from law schools to the changing nature of the profession.

Am Law Daily reviewed the book, and said:

Morgan doesn't think that lawyers or legal needs are about to disappear. Rather, he argues, thanks to a combination of technology, global competition, and client demands, today's fairly comfortable landscape will be transformed.

"What this book predicts," he writes, "is that the interaction of law with increasingly complex economic and social issues will make distinctively legal questions less common and make many of the skills now honed in law schools less relevant."

In his view, highly specialized lawyers—often working out of large globe-straddling firms—will serve their clients as one of many agents addressing a problem. Some of the work now done by lawyers will be done by others, and vice versa.

"For better or worse," he writes, "most of tomorrow's lawyers will resemble what we today call business consultants more than they will call to mind Clarence Darrow or Atticus Finch."

The Vanishing American Lawyer seems to be consistent with Richard Suskind's The End of Lawyers? in their shared conclusions that the future of the profession is facing profound changes brought on by technology, the commoditization of legal services, external investment, and legal outsourcing.

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