Home Contact Us To Order
   
       
Return to Law and Society List of Books
   
Edited by Eric Rise,
University of Delaware
   

   
Lawyers and Immigrants, 1870-1940: A Cultural History
   

Louis Anthes

       
   

Anthes' work uncovers the legal strategies of immigrants in New York between 1870 and 1940 and their often conflicted relationship with the established legal community.

Anthes tells the story of European immigrants and their relationship to New York's legal profession between Reconstruction and the Great Depression. Using published materials, archival sources, and privately maintained documents, he explores how immigrants--mainly from southern and eastern Europe--passed through Ellis Island, used the law after suffering personal injuries at work and at home, and studied at city law schools. They improvised their own legal descriptions of everyday life by relying on themselves, families, neighbors, and local lawyers. At the same time though, New York's more established lawyers persistently interpreted immigrants' legal strategies as inconsistent with their profession's highest duties, and they promoted many reforms to maintain their control over the practice of law.

Table of Contents

    Introduction
  1. Reconstructions
  2. Labyrinths
  3. Factories
  4. Streetcorners
  5. Schooldays
  6. Bohemian Justice

  7. Epilogue
    Sources
    Selected Bibliography
    Index
       
  Louis Anthes earned his Ph.D. from New York University in 2000 and a J.D. from the School of Law. He has published on United States legal history and is currently an independent scholar living in Europe and the United States.
       
    x, 306 pages. Index, bibliography. ISBN 1-59332-010-8.
$75. Published.