Is the Market Redefining the Meaning of Professionalism in Australia?

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Author(s)
Primary Supervisor
Robertson, Mike
Other Supervisors
Guilding, Chris
Year published
2007
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The thesis attempts to address some of the gaps between the literature that theorises and critiques the function of the professions and what practitioners actually do in practice. This disparity between the claims in the literature and the practice reality is identified by Nelson and Trubek. These authors assert that very little is known about the professional ideologies of lawyers and other professionals or what individual practitioners think about their role.
While the study is modest in that it focuses on only a small number of participants and is geographically concentrated in South-East Queensland, the findings give ...
View more >The thesis attempts to address some of the gaps between the literature that theorises and critiques the function of the professions and what practitioners actually do in practice. This disparity between the claims in the literature and the practice reality is identified by Nelson and Trubek. These authors assert that very little is known about the professional ideologies of lawyers and other professionals or what individual practitioners think about their role. While the study is modest in that it focuses on only a small number of participants and is geographically concentrated in South-East Queensland, the findings give some indication of the views of the broader body of people in both accounting and law (a) studying to become professionals and (b) graduates (both new entrants and those more experienced) already in the practice environment. However, it should be noted that this thesis is particularly focussed on the views of those in the legal profession.
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View more >The thesis attempts to address some of the gaps between the literature that theorises and critiques the function of the professions and what practitioners actually do in practice. This disparity between the claims in the literature and the practice reality is identified by Nelson and Trubek. These authors assert that very little is known about the professional ideologies of lawyers and other professionals or what individual practitioners think about their role. While the study is modest in that it focuses on only a small number of participants and is geographically concentrated in South-East Queensland, the findings give some indication of the views of the broader body of people in both accounting and law (a) studying to become professionals and (b) graduates (both new entrants and those more experienced) already in the practice environment. However, it should be noted that this thesis is particularly focussed on the views of those in the legal profession.
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Thesis Type
Thesis (PhD Doctorate)
Degree Program
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
School
Griffith Law School
Copyright Statement
The author owns the copyright in this thesis, unless stated otherwise.
Item Access Status
Public
Subject
professionalism
lawyering
legal profession
market factors
practice environment
Australia