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The Impact of Technology and Innovation on the Well-Being of the Legal Profession

Edited by: Michael Legg, Prue Vines, Janet Chan

ISBN13: 9781780689555
Published: July 2020
Publisher: Intersentia Publishers
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £75.00



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The legal profession has undergone significant changes in the past few years. These have affected working structures and context within the profession, in turn affecting the wellbeing of individual practitioners. This book is the first to consider how these operate in practice and how they impact on the wellbeing of lawyers. This is significant because legal systems cannot operate without properly functioning lawyers. Changes considered include rapidly evolving technologies such as the internet, artificial intelligence and increasing digitisation, and innovations in legal practice. Such innovations include changes in the structures of law firms, changing requirements about whether lawyers must practice separately from other professions and changing employment practices in law firms.

The Impact of Technology and Innovation on the Well-Being of the Legal Profession considers the impact of all of these developments on the legal profession. It begins with students and how their responses to questions about their attitudes to learning may provide clues as to why they and the professionals they become might be more vulnerable to depression and anxiety than the wider population. The analysis then extends to how both satisfaction and stress levels can be simultaneously high and the implications of this, considering the experiences of lawyers in private and public practice, as well as academics, and their responses to the interactions between all of these changes. Leading researchers assess the situation in Australia and the United Kingdom in these various domains, using empirical research as the foundation of the arguments put forth.

Anyone who is interested in the future of the legal profession and the challenges currently faced as a consequence of the massive structural and environmental changes experienced should read this book.

Subjects:
Legal Practice Management
Contents:
Part I. Introduction
Chapter 1. The Changing Field of Lawyering and its Impact on Practice and Wellbeing
Part II. Change, Stress and Wellbeing
Chapter 2. Student Attitudes to Legal Education: Revisiting the Pointers to Depression and Anxiety?
Chapter 3. The Paradox of Satisfaction and Distress Among Lawyers: Implications for a Changing Field
Chapter 4. Stress, Bullying and Harassment in the Legal Profession: A Risky Business
Chapter 5. Public Sector Lawyering Stress and Wellbeing: Neoliberalism at Work?
Chapter 6. Law Teachers Speak Out: What do Law Schools Need to Change?
Part III. Technology, Innovation and the Structure of Legal Practice
Chapter 7. Behavioural Legal Ethics and Attorney Wellbeing in Contemporary Practice
Chapter 8. Is 'Uberisation' the Path to Lawyer Wellbeing?
Chapter 9. Do Law Firm Structures Matter? Incorporated Legal Practices and the Health and Wellbeing of Lawyers
Chapter 10. Artificial Intelligence and Lawyer Wellbeing
Chapter 11. Lawyers' Fee Arrangements and their Wellbeing
Part IV. Conclusion
Chapter 12. Reflections on the UK Experience of Legal Academic Wellbeing and the Legal Professions: Moving Across Silos