U.S. Legal Practice Area Profession
(Redirected from American Bar Profession)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
A U.S. Legal Practice Area Profession is a U.S. professional practice area profession that comprises approximately 1.32 million licensed attorneys distributed across legal practice specializations.
- AKA: United States Legal Profession, American Legal Practice Profession, U.S. Attorney Profession, U.S. Law Practice Profession, American Bar Profession, U.S. Licensed Attorney Profession.
- Context:
- It can typically distribute U.S. Legal Practitioners through practice settings (74% private practice, 7% in-house, 8% government).
- It can typically concentrate U.S. Legal Expertise within metropolitan legal markets.
- It can typically require U.S. Bar Examination for professional admission.
- It can often allocate U.S. Legal Professional Resources via practice area demand.
- It can often require U.S. Bar Admission through state licensing requirements.
- It can often maintain U.S. Legal Ethics Standards through disciplinary systems.
- It can structure U.S. Legal Career Paths with specialization tracks.
- It can maintain U.S. Legal Professional Standards through bar association regulation.
- It can shape U.S. Legal Labor Markets via supply-demand dynamics.
- It can support U.S. Legal Professional Development through continuing education.
- It can range from being a Solo Practitioner U.S. Legal Practice Area Profession to being a BigLaw U.S. Legal Practice Area Profession, depending on its firm size.
- It can range from being a Generalist U.S. Legal Practice Area Profession to being a Specialist U.S. Legal Practice Area Profession, depending on its practice focus.
- It can range from being a Regional U.S. Legal Practice Area Profession to being a National U.S. Legal Practice Area Profession, depending on its geographic scope.
- It can range from being a Public Service U.S. Legal Practice Area Profession to being a Private Practice U.S. Legal Practice Area Profession, depending on its sector orientation.
- It can integrate with U.S. Legal Technology Systems for practice innovation.
- It can interact with U.S. Legal Education Systems through pipeline programs.
- ...
- Examples:
- Large U.S. Legal Practice Area Professions, such as:
- U.S. Corporate Law Profession with hundreds of thousands of practitioners.
- U.S. Litigation Profession with ~178,000 in personal injury alone.
- U.S. Real Estate Law Profession spread across all communities.
- Specialized U.S. Legal Practice Area Professions, such as:
- U.S. Patent Law Profession with ~37,000 registered patent attorneys.
- U.S. Family Law Profession with ~72,500 practitioners.
- U.S. Immigration Law Profession in small firms and non-profits.
- Public Service U.S. Legal Practice Area Professions, such as:
- U.S. Public Defender Profession in government roles.
- U.S. Legal Aid Attorney Profession in non-profit sector.
- U.S. Government Counsel Profession representing ~8% of lawyers.
- Emerging U.S. Legal Practice Area Professions, such as:
- U.S. AI Law Profession with growing specialist pool.
- U.S. Data Privacy Law Profession with increasing demand.
- U.S. Cannabis Law Profession in legalized jurisdictions.
- ...
- Large U.S. Legal Practice Area Professions, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- U.S. Paralegal Profession, which provides legal support without attorney licensure.
- U.S. Legal Academic Profession, which focuses on legal education rather than legal practice.
- International Legal Profession, which operates under foreign jurisdictions.
- U.S. Law Enforcement Profession, which enforces law rather than practicing it.
- See: U.S. Professional Practice Area Profession, U.S. Legal Practice Area, U.S. Legal Practice Area Market, U.S. Legal Practice Area Income Distribution, Legal Practice Area, American Bar Association, State Bar Association, Legal Professional Development, Professional Practice Area Profession, U.S. Service Profession.