The individual practitioner of law in Chicago is a self-made man who came up the hard way from poor, immigrant surroundings." So began the serious empirical study of American law practice. The year was 1962 and the book was Lawyers on Their Own: The Solo Practitioner in an Urban Setting, by Jerome Carlin ([1962] 1994, p. 1). Carlin's book reported on a qualitative, interview-based study of 83 Chicago lawyers who practiced on their own. Two years later, Erwin Smigel (1964) came out with a compae rable study of the country's largest firms, The Wall Street Lawyer: Professional Organization Man? Then, in 1966, Carlin published Lawyers' Ethics: A Surwey of the New York City Bar, based on more than 800 interviews, which examined the ethical beliefs and practices of a cross section of New York lawyers. The picture that emerges from these three groundbreaking studies of law practice is straightforward. On Wall Street, in the biggest and most prestigious firms, things were good, at least for those who could get past the