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REFERENCES

Featured Readings

Ballakrishnen, Swethaa S. 2019. “Just Like Global Firms: Unintended Gender Parity and Speculative Isomorphism in India's Elite Professions.” Law & Society Review 53 (1): 108-40.

doi: 10.1111/lasr. 12381

Chan, Kay-Wah. 2012. “Setting the Limits: Who Controls the Size of the Legal Profession in Japan?” International Journal of the Legal Profession 19 (2-3): 321-37. doi: 10.1080/09695958.2012.783990

Galanter, Marc, and Nick Robinson. 2013. “India's Grand Advocates: A Legal Elite Flourishing in the Era of Globalization.” International Journal of the Legal Profession 20(3): 241-65. doi: 10.1080/09695958.2014.912359

Gillespie, John. 2013. “The Juridification of Cause Advocacy in SocialistAsia: Vietnam as a Case Study.” Wisconsin International Law Journal 31: 672-701.

Hsu, Ching-fang. 2019. “The Political Origins of Professional Identity: Lawyers, Judges, and Prosecutors in Taiwan's State Transformation.” Asian Journal of Law and Society 6 (2): 321-46. doi: 10.1017Zals.2018.35

Lev, Daniel S. 1976. “Origins of the Indonesian Advocacy.” Indonesia 21: 135-69. doi: 10.2307/3350960

Liu, Sida. 2011. “Lawyers, State Officials and Significant Others: Symbiotic Exchange in the Chinese Legal Services Market.” The China Quarterly 206: 276-93. doi: 10.1017/S0305741011000269

Shafqat, Sahar. 2018. “Civil Society and the Lawyers' Movement of Pakistan.” Law & Social Inquiry 43 (3): 889-914. doi: 10.nn/lsi.12283

Tam, Waikung. 2013. Legal Mobilization under Authoritarianism: The Case of Post-Colonial Hong Kong. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi: 10.1017/CBO9781139424394.009

Tungnirun, Arm. 2018. “Practising on the Moon: Globalization and Legal Consciousness of Foreign Corporate Lawyers in Myanmar.” Asian Journal of Law and Society 5 (1): 49-67. doi: 10.1017/als.2017.30

Other Works Cited

Abbott, Andrew.

1988. The System of Professions: An Essay on the Division of Expert Labor. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. doi: 10.7208/chicago/ 9780226189666.001.0001

Abel, Richard L. 1989. American Lawyers. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Heinz, John P. and Edward O. Laumann. 1982. Chicago Lawyers: The Social Structure of the Bar. New York: Russell Sage Foundation. doi: 10.2307/ 2578996

Michelson, Ethan. 2007. “Lawyers, Political Embeddedness, and Institutional Continuity in China's Transition from Socialism.” American Journal of Sociology 113 (2): 352-414. doi: 10.1086/518907

Ota, Shozo, and Kahei Rokumoto. 1993. “Issues of the Lawyer Population: Japan.” Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law 25: 315-32.

Schmitthener, Samuel. 1968. “A Sketch of the Development of the Legal Profession in India.” Law & Society Review 3: 337-82. doi: 10.2307/ 3053007

Suggested Readings

Fu, Hualing, and Richard Cullen. 2011. “Climbing the Weiquan Ladder: A Radicalizing Process for Rights-Protection Lawyers.” The China Quarterly 205: 40—59. doi:10.1017/S0305741010001384

Ishida, Kyoko. 2017. “Deterioration or Refinement? Impacts of an Increasing Number of Lawyers on the Lawyer Discipline System in Japan.” International Journal of the Legal Profession 24: 243-57. doi: 10.1080/ 09695958.2017.1324557

Rajah, Jothie, and Arun K. Thiruvengadam. 2013. “Of Absences, Masks, and Exceptions: Cause Lawyering in Singapore.” Wisconsin International Law Journal 31: 646-71.

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Source: Chua Lynette J., Engel David M.. The Asian Law and Society Reader. Cambridge University Press,2023. — 795 p.. 2023

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  1. References
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  3. Chua Lynette J., Engel David M.. The Asian Law and Society Reader. Cambridge University Press,2023. — 795 p., 2023
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