North Carolina Law Review
Volume 84, Number 5 (2006) Empirical Studies of the Legal Profession: What Do We Know About Lawyers' Lives?
Front Matter
Table of Contents - Issue 5
North Carolina Law Review
Articles
Practicing Immigration Law in Filene's Basement
Richard L. Abel
The Professionalization of Law Firm in-House Counsel
Elizabeth Chambliss
The Organization of Public Interest Practice: 1975-2004
Laura Beth Nielsen and Catherine R. Albiston
The Changing Structure of the Legal Services Industry and the Careers of Lawyers
George P. Baker and Rachel Parkin
An Empirical Study of Single-Tier versus Two-Tier Partnerships in the Am Law 200
William D. Henderson
The Racial Paradox of the Corporate Law Firm
Richard H. Sander
Comments
Introduction to the 2005 North Carolina Law Review Symposium, Empirical Studies of the Legal Profession: What Do We Know about Lawyers' Lives
John M. Conley and Scott Baker
Explaining the Spread of Law Firm in-House Counsel Positions: A Response to Professor Chambliss
Elizabeth H. Gorman
The Profession in Profile: A Commentary on Baker and Parkin
John M. Conley and Scott Baker
A Comment on Professor Henderson's Empirical Study of Single-Tier versus Two-Tier Partnerships in the Am Law 200
Robert A. Dolinko
A Response to Professor Sander: Is It Really All about the Grades
James E. Coleman Jr. and Mitu Gulati