I dunno. All the young associates I know at those firms are highly paid lawserfs; they keep their heads down, do what they are told, and hope to make partner. Maybe partners call the shots, but by thattime they are, as they say, socialized. --jks
>
>Justin, you may be right but a year or two on K Street in DC at a big ten
>or
>twenty law firm would change your mind [esp the one's that are bastions of
>the
>Right]
>
>Ian
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: owner-lbo-talk at lists.panix.com
> > [mailto:owner-lbo-talk at lists.panix.com]On Behalf Of Justin Schwartz
> > Sent: Wednesday, February 21, 2001 1:44 PM
> > To: lbo-talk at lists.panix.com
> > Subject: RE: kids v. economists
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > . If all the economists were
> > >radicalized via new analytical tools we'd still have to confront the
>poly
> > >sci,
> > >business admin/management/marketing, and law departments to change the
> > >ongoing
> > >creation of economic behavior.
> >
> > You mustn't think that law schools are all the University of Chicago,
>econ &
> > law running wild. It's true that Critical Legal Studies (legal
>psotmodernism
> > from the left) is prett quiescent, but if my experience at Ohio State
>Law
> > was typical, law profs are typically left liberals, well to the left of
> > their students, more likely than not. And you tell the students what you
> > like; they don't call the shots when they go out in the world as
>lawyers.
> >
> > --jks
> >
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