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Colloquium: The Legal Profession's Monopoly on the Practice of Law

Foreword: The Profession’s Monopoly and Its Core Values
Protecting the Profession or the Public? Rethinking Unauthorized-Practice Enforcement
By Deborah L. Rhode & Lucy Buford Ricca
The Monopoly Myth and Other Tales About the Superiority of Lawyers
By Leslie C. Levin
Cracks in the Profession’s Monopoly Armor
By Jack P. Sahl
Hemispheres Apart, a Profession Connected
By Dana Remus
The Legal Profession’s Monopoly: Failing To Protect Consumers
By Laurel A. Rigertas
Overstepping Ethical Boundaries? Limitations on State Efforts To Provide Access to Justice in Family Courts
By Jessica Dixon Weaver
Access to Justice Requires Access to Attorneys: Restrictions on the Practice of Law Serve a Societal Purpose
By Lisa H. Nicholson
Anyone Can “Think Like a Lawyer”: How the Lawyers’ Monopoly on Legal Understanding Undermines Democracy and the Rule of Law in the United States
By Bridgette Dunlap
Legal Information, the Consumer Law Market, and the First Amendment
By Renee Newman Knake
Globalization and the Monopoly of ABA-Approved Law Schools: Missed Opportunities or Dodged Bullets?
By Carole Silver
Putting the Legal Profession’s Monopoly on the Practice of Law in a Global Context
By Laurel S. Terry
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