Anna Mountford-Zimdars, Kings Learning Institute, Kings College London, and I have written a new paper on legal education in England & Wales and Germany focusing on barristers' education and German advocates. It's on SSRN.
Here's the abstract:
This paper explores the relationship
between legal practice and type of university attended and degree course
studied for English and German lawyers.
For England, some of the analysis is only based on data for barristers.
We find that university attended matters a great deal for English barristers if
they tend to have graduated from elite universities within the stratified
British higher education system. In contrast, the flat German higher education
system is also mirrored in the profile of lawyers were graduates in the top
jobs come from a wide range of institutions.
For Germany, attainment at university and graduating in law are keys to
unlocking elite positions whereas the status of university seems second to none
in the British system, trumping having studied law as a first degree. The paper thus empirically confirms anecdotal
insights that knowledge and skills directly related to law matters more for
early career entry in Germany and generic skills and socialization at elite
universities matters more for transitioning into elite legal employment in
England. It is unclear from the
available data whether the different structures mean that the social make-up of
the legal professions differs, but it is clear that different ways of accessing
this key profession operate in the two contexts.
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