The Indian Legal Profession in the Age of Globalization
Herausgeber: Khanna, Vikramaditya S.; Wilkins, David B.; Trubek, David M.
The Indian Legal Profession in the Age of Globalization
Herausgeber: Khanna, Vikramaditya S.; Wilkins, David B.; Trubek, David M.
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This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the impact of globalization on the legal profession in India.
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This book provides a comprehensive analysis of the impact of globalization on the legal profession in India.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 774
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. August 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 46mm
- Gewicht: 1251g
- ISBN-13: 9781107151840
- ISBN-10: 1107151848
- Artikelnr.: 48401582
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 774
- Erscheinungstermin: 24. August 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 46mm
- Gewicht: 1251g
- ISBN-13: 9781107151840
- ISBN-10: 1107151848
- Artikelnr.: 48401582
Section 1. Setting the Stage: 1. An introduction to globalization, lawyers,
and emerging economies: the case of India David B. Wilkins, Vikramaditya S.
Khanna and David M. Trubek; 2. Overview of India and the Indian legal
profession Arpita Gupta, Vikramaditya S. Khanna and David B. Wilkins;
Section 2. The Growth of the Corporate Core: 3. Mapping India's corporate
law firm sector Ashish Nanda, David B. Wilkins and Bryon Fong; 4.
Globalization and the rise of the in-house counsel movement in India David
B. Wilkins and Vikramaditya S. Khanna; 5. The impact of globalization on
cross-border mergers and acquisitions on the legal profession in India
Umakanth Varottil; Section 3. New Actors and Functions within the Corporate
Core: 6. Being your own boss: the career trajectories and motivations of
India's newest corporate lawyers Jayanth K. Krishnan and Patrick W. Thomas;
7. Women in India's 'global' law firms: comparative gender frames and the
advantage of new organizations Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen; 8. Pro bono and
the corporate legal sector in India Arpita Gupta; 9. How India's corporate
law firms influence legal, policy, and regulatory frameworks Bhargavi
Zaveri; Section 4. Regulation and Foreign Competition: 10. Theories of law
firm globalization in the shadow of colonialism: a cultural and
institutional analysis of English and Indian corporate law firms in the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries John Flood; 11. Globalization of the
legal profession and regulation of law practice in India: the 'foreign
entry' debate Aditya Singh; 12. Festina lente or disguised protectionism?:
monopoly and competition in the Indian legal profession Rahul Singh;
Section 5. Old Lawyers, New Lawyers, and Transforming Roles: 13. The
evolving global supply chain for legal services: India's role as a critical
link Vikramaditya S. Khanna; 14. Grand advocates: the traditional elite
lawyers Marc Galanter and Nick Robinson; 15. Aggregation of land for a
growing and globalizing economy: the role of small-town lawyers in India
Pavan Mamidi; Section 6. Legal Education: 16. Responding to the market: the
impact of the rise of corporate law firms on elite legal education in India
Jonathan Gingerich and Nick Robinson; 17. The anatomy of legal recruitment
in India: tracing the tracks of globalization Jonathan Gingerich,
Vikramaditya Khanna and Aditya Singh; 18. The making of legal elites and
the IDIA of justice Shamnad Basheer, K. V. Krishnaprasad, Sree Mitra and
Prajna Mohapatra; 19. Experiments in legal education in India: Jindal
Global Law School and private nonprofit legal education C. Raj Kumar;
Section 7. Capacity Building: 20. Equalizing access to the WTO: how Indian
trade lawyers build state capacity Gregory Shaffer, James Nedumpara, Aseema
Sinha and Amrita Bahri; 21. Indian corporations, the administrative state,
and the rise of Indian trade remedies Mark Wu; 22. Rising India in
investment arbitration: shifts in the legal field and regime participation
Mihaela Papa and Aditya Sarkar.
and emerging economies: the case of India David B. Wilkins, Vikramaditya S.
Khanna and David M. Trubek; 2. Overview of India and the Indian legal
profession Arpita Gupta, Vikramaditya S. Khanna and David B. Wilkins;
Section 2. The Growth of the Corporate Core: 3. Mapping India's corporate
law firm sector Ashish Nanda, David B. Wilkins and Bryon Fong; 4.
Globalization and the rise of the in-house counsel movement in India David
B. Wilkins and Vikramaditya S. Khanna; 5. The impact of globalization on
cross-border mergers and acquisitions on the legal profession in India
Umakanth Varottil; Section 3. New Actors and Functions within the Corporate
Core: 6. Being your own boss: the career trajectories and motivations of
India's newest corporate lawyers Jayanth K. Krishnan and Patrick W. Thomas;
7. Women in India's 'global' law firms: comparative gender frames and the
advantage of new organizations Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen; 8. Pro bono and
the corporate legal sector in India Arpita Gupta; 9. How India's corporate
law firms influence legal, policy, and regulatory frameworks Bhargavi
Zaveri; Section 4. Regulation and Foreign Competition: 10. Theories of law
firm globalization in the shadow of colonialism: a cultural and
institutional analysis of English and Indian corporate law firms in the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries John Flood; 11. Globalization of the
legal profession and regulation of law practice in India: the 'foreign
entry' debate Aditya Singh; 12. Festina lente or disguised protectionism?:
monopoly and competition in the Indian legal profession Rahul Singh;
Section 5. Old Lawyers, New Lawyers, and Transforming Roles: 13. The
evolving global supply chain for legal services: India's role as a critical
link Vikramaditya S. Khanna; 14. Grand advocates: the traditional elite
lawyers Marc Galanter and Nick Robinson; 15. Aggregation of land for a
growing and globalizing economy: the role of small-town lawyers in India
Pavan Mamidi; Section 6. Legal Education: 16. Responding to the market: the
impact of the rise of corporate law firms on elite legal education in India
Jonathan Gingerich and Nick Robinson; 17. The anatomy of legal recruitment
in India: tracing the tracks of globalization Jonathan Gingerich,
Vikramaditya Khanna and Aditya Singh; 18. The making of legal elites and
the IDIA of justice Shamnad Basheer, K. V. Krishnaprasad, Sree Mitra and
Prajna Mohapatra; 19. Experiments in legal education in India: Jindal
Global Law School and private nonprofit legal education C. Raj Kumar;
Section 7. Capacity Building: 20. Equalizing access to the WTO: how Indian
trade lawyers build state capacity Gregory Shaffer, James Nedumpara, Aseema
Sinha and Amrita Bahri; 21. Indian corporations, the administrative state,
and the rise of Indian trade remedies Mark Wu; 22. Rising India in
investment arbitration: shifts in the legal field and regime participation
Mihaela Papa and Aditya Sarkar.
Section 1. Setting the Stage: 1. An introduction to globalization, lawyers,
and emerging economies: the case of India David B. Wilkins, Vikramaditya S.
Khanna and David M. Trubek; 2. Overview of India and the Indian legal
profession Arpita Gupta, Vikramaditya S. Khanna and David B. Wilkins;
Section 2. The Growth of the Corporate Core: 3. Mapping India's corporate
law firm sector Ashish Nanda, David B. Wilkins and Bryon Fong; 4.
Globalization and the rise of the in-house counsel movement in India David
B. Wilkins and Vikramaditya S. Khanna; 5. The impact of globalization on
cross-border mergers and acquisitions on the legal profession in India
Umakanth Varottil; Section 3. New Actors and Functions within the Corporate
Core: 6. Being your own boss: the career trajectories and motivations of
India's newest corporate lawyers Jayanth K. Krishnan and Patrick W. Thomas;
7. Women in India's 'global' law firms: comparative gender frames and the
advantage of new organizations Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen; 8. Pro bono and
the corporate legal sector in India Arpita Gupta; 9. How India's corporate
law firms influence legal, policy, and regulatory frameworks Bhargavi
Zaveri; Section 4. Regulation and Foreign Competition: 10. Theories of law
firm globalization in the shadow of colonialism: a cultural and
institutional analysis of English and Indian corporate law firms in the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries John Flood; 11. Globalization of the
legal profession and regulation of law practice in India: the 'foreign
entry' debate Aditya Singh; 12. Festina lente or disguised protectionism?:
monopoly and competition in the Indian legal profession Rahul Singh;
Section 5. Old Lawyers, New Lawyers, and Transforming Roles: 13. The
evolving global supply chain for legal services: India's role as a critical
link Vikramaditya S. Khanna; 14. Grand advocates: the traditional elite
lawyers Marc Galanter and Nick Robinson; 15. Aggregation of land for a
growing and globalizing economy: the role of small-town lawyers in India
Pavan Mamidi; Section 6. Legal Education: 16. Responding to the market: the
impact of the rise of corporate law firms on elite legal education in India
Jonathan Gingerich and Nick Robinson; 17. The anatomy of legal recruitment
in India: tracing the tracks of globalization Jonathan Gingerich,
Vikramaditya Khanna and Aditya Singh; 18. The making of legal elites and
the IDIA of justice Shamnad Basheer, K. V. Krishnaprasad, Sree Mitra and
Prajna Mohapatra; 19. Experiments in legal education in India: Jindal
Global Law School and private nonprofit legal education C. Raj Kumar;
Section 7. Capacity Building: 20. Equalizing access to the WTO: how Indian
trade lawyers build state capacity Gregory Shaffer, James Nedumpara, Aseema
Sinha and Amrita Bahri; 21. Indian corporations, the administrative state,
and the rise of Indian trade remedies Mark Wu; 22. Rising India in
investment arbitration: shifts in the legal field and regime participation
Mihaela Papa and Aditya Sarkar.
and emerging economies: the case of India David B. Wilkins, Vikramaditya S.
Khanna and David M. Trubek; 2. Overview of India and the Indian legal
profession Arpita Gupta, Vikramaditya S. Khanna and David B. Wilkins;
Section 2. The Growth of the Corporate Core: 3. Mapping India's corporate
law firm sector Ashish Nanda, David B. Wilkins and Bryon Fong; 4.
Globalization and the rise of the in-house counsel movement in India David
B. Wilkins and Vikramaditya S. Khanna; 5. The impact of globalization on
cross-border mergers and acquisitions on the legal profession in India
Umakanth Varottil; Section 3. New Actors and Functions within the Corporate
Core: 6. Being your own boss: the career trajectories and motivations of
India's newest corporate lawyers Jayanth K. Krishnan and Patrick W. Thomas;
7. Women in India's 'global' law firms: comparative gender frames and the
advantage of new organizations Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen; 8. Pro bono and
the corporate legal sector in India Arpita Gupta; 9. How India's corporate
law firms influence legal, policy, and regulatory frameworks Bhargavi
Zaveri; Section 4. Regulation and Foreign Competition: 10. Theories of law
firm globalization in the shadow of colonialism: a cultural and
institutional analysis of English and Indian corporate law firms in the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries John Flood; 11. Globalization of the
legal profession and regulation of law practice in India: the 'foreign
entry' debate Aditya Singh; 12. Festina lente or disguised protectionism?:
monopoly and competition in the Indian legal profession Rahul Singh;
Section 5. Old Lawyers, New Lawyers, and Transforming Roles: 13. The
evolving global supply chain for legal services: India's role as a critical
link Vikramaditya S. Khanna; 14. Grand advocates: the traditional elite
lawyers Marc Galanter and Nick Robinson; 15. Aggregation of land for a
growing and globalizing economy: the role of small-town lawyers in India
Pavan Mamidi; Section 6. Legal Education: 16. Responding to the market: the
impact of the rise of corporate law firms on elite legal education in India
Jonathan Gingerich and Nick Robinson; 17. The anatomy of legal recruitment
in India: tracing the tracks of globalization Jonathan Gingerich,
Vikramaditya Khanna and Aditya Singh; 18. The making of legal elites and
the IDIA of justice Shamnad Basheer, K. V. Krishnaprasad, Sree Mitra and
Prajna Mohapatra; 19. Experiments in legal education in India: Jindal
Global Law School and private nonprofit legal education C. Raj Kumar;
Section 7. Capacity Building: 20. Equalizing access to the WTO: how Indian
trade lawyers build state capacity Gregory Shaffer, James Nedumpara, Aseema
Sinha and Amrita Bahri; 21. Indian corporations, the administrative state,
and the rise of Indian trade remedies Mark Wu; 22. Rising India in
investment arbitration: shifts in the legal field and regime participation
Mihaela Papa and Aditya Sarkar.