This book re-examines fundamental assumptions about the American legal profession and the boundaries between professional lawyers, lay lawyers, and social workers. Putting legal history and women's history in dialogue, it demonstrates that nineteenth-century women's organizations first offered legal aid to the poor and that middle-class women functioning as lay lawyers, provided such assistance. Felice Batlan illustrates that by the early twentieth century, male lawyers founded their own legal aid societies. These new legal aid lawyers created an imagined history of legal aid and a blueprint...
This book re-examines fundamental assumptions about the American legal profession and the boundaries between professional lawyers, lay lawyers, and so...