Abstract: During the second decade of the twentieth century, male legal aid lawyers gained prominence, and as they did so they sought to move legal aid from local organizations rooted in particular cities to the national stage. These leaders hoped to create a national association of legal aid societies, expand legal aid societies across the country, standardize the provision of legal aid, and generally promote the stature of legal aid. In the process, they tried to reduce and even eclipse women's visibility and their work in the field as lay lawyers and professional lawyers. During this same period, social work was emerging as a distinct profession. Women lay lawyers became strongly associated with social workers, and as a result, at least some of the new men leading legal aid argued that social workers also should have little or no role in its provision. Although the crystallization of these organizing efforts was the publication in 1919 of Reginald Heber Smith's Justice and the Poor, the groundwork was laid in 1911 with the first national conference on legal aid. The ensuing decade saw significant conflict as men sought to redefine the nature of legal aid and lay claim to its foundation. Justice and the Poor, in many ways the culmination of that process, was an imagined history.
Publication Year: 2015
Publication Date: 2015-04-16
Language: en
Type: book-chapter
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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