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Moral Panic at the English Bar: Paternal vs. Commercial Ideologies of Legal Practice in the 1860s
Authors:W Wesley Pue
Institution:W. Wesley Pue;is an associate professor, Department of Law, Faculty of Social Sciences, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada. LL.M. University of Alberta;D. Jur. York University.
Abstract:This article examines a period of profound crisis about the English bar. The metaphor of "moral panic" is invoked in assessing the impact of five notorious cases of barristers' misconduct which riveted public attention between 1859 and 1863. Four of the barristers involved were subjected to "professional discipline" in what was the first spate of disciplinary proceedings for breaches of bar "etiquette." Professional "ethics" were applied in remarkably selective ways and amounted to a "shutting down" of laissez-faire professional practices. This was a crucial turning point in the English legd profession, and the effect was to transform the bar from a relatively open, unregulated status group into something akin to a rule-bound disciplinary regime.
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