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Delawyering the Corporation

My paper from Wisconsin’s in-house counsel symposium (symposium discussed here, paper previewed here) is now available on SSRN. The paper is Delawyering the Corporation.  Here’s the abstract:

This article shows how in-house lawyers’ role has evolved to address the high cost of legal services and the traditional information asymmetry between lawyers and clients. The first stage of this evolution involved the expanding role of in-house counsel from intermediary between corporate executives and the corporation’s outside law firm to the corporation’s purchasing agent in a broader market for legal services. The second stage could see legal work distributed among employees with and without legal expertise throughout the corporation. The article also shows how evolving legal information technology could facilitate corporations’ full-fledged integration of legal information into business decisions. These developments have potential implications for the corporate and general markets for legal services and for legal education.

In short, don’t assume that the evolution of corporate law practice will stop with more legal work moving inside the corporation.  The same forces driving this move — technology and markets — may change the nature of the work.

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