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Professionalization as Status Adaptation: The Nobility, the Bureaucracy, and the Modernization of the Legal Profession in Finland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 December 2018

Abstract

In contrast to Anglo-American lines of professional development, the central agent of professionalization in many Continental countries was the state bureaucracy. However, this article proposes that an understanding of the class structure of traditional society is also needed to explain the privileged position of lawyers. An historical study of lawyers in the 19th century, after Finland was annexed by Russia, demonstrates that the legal profession provided the nobility an important medium of adaptation to the new society. The importance of the legal profession initially to the state bureaucracy, and subsequently to the nobility, explains its social prominence and its future development. An analysis of the position and needs of the prominent classes in the society of Old Regimes may constitute a fruitful viewpoint in the study of early professionalization in the Continental context more generally.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © American Bar Foundation, 1991 

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References

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90 Although in different periods the proportion of lawyers was even lower in West Germany (7%), in Israel (8%), and in Ireland (9%). However, the proportion was 28% in Mexico, 37% in Canada, and as high as 56% in the U.S.A. In Finland, lawyers as well as many other sections of the upper class were partly replaced in the upper class by other groups (e.g., the number of teachers increased considerably) and by those from lower classes—see Noponen, Kansanedustujien 58–59. The clergy, however, succeeded in maintaining their position.Google Scholar

91 E. Boisman, Suomen valtioneuvoston jäsenten tausta vuosina 1917–1966, 21, 27 (Publications of the Institute of Finnish History at Jyväskylä University, no. 6) Jyväskylä, 1980).Google Scholar

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93 The proportion of lawyers among the members of government was (according to Wences, op. cit. in note 91) 16% in West Germany and Australia; 60% in Canada; and 70% in the U.S.A. In Finland there were, during the period 1917–, almost equally large a group of those graduated in other faculties, such as philosophical (20% of those with university education), technical, theological, military, etc. During the period 1939–66, lawyers constituted a minority among university graduates. Id. at 27.Google Scholar

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96 In 1975, for instance, of 5,623 lawyers, 31% had a post in state administration, 9% in communes, 23% in business life, no more than 17% in courts, and 11% were private attorneys. P. Immeli, Lakimiesten tulevat työmarkkinat Suomessa vuosina 1975–1990, 5 (Helsinki: Suomen Lakimiesliitto, 1976).Google Scholar

97 Ståhlberg,” De statligt anställda,” at 95; Vartola & af Ursin, Hallintovirkamieskunta 77.Google Scholar

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99 On the latter case, see J. Caplan,” Profession as a Vocation: The German Civil Service” in Cocks & Jarausch, German Professions 169 (cited in note 1).Google Scholar

100 I am currently engaged in more comprehensive research into the 19th-century Finnish professions.Google Scholar

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103 See, e.g., A. La Vopa,” Specialists against Specialization: Hellenism as Professional Ideology in German Classical Studies,”in Cocks & Jarausch, German Professions 27–45.Google Scholar

104 As argued by, e.g., Rueschemeyer,” Legal Professions” at 313; H. Siegrist,” Public Office or Free Profession? German Attorneys in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries,”in Cocks & Jarausch, German Professions 47; T. C. Halliday & B. C. Carruthers,” States, Professions, and Legal Change: Reform of the English Insolvency Act, 1977–1986” (presented at the 12th World Congress of Sociology, Madrid, 13–17 August 1990; M. S. Larson,” In the Matter of Experts and Professionals, Or How Impossible It Is to Leave Nothing Unsaid,” in R. Torstendahl & M. Burrage, eds., The Formation of Professions 24–50 (London: Sage Publications, 1990).Google Scholar

105 As early as the first half of the century attempts at occupational advancement were made by certain occupational groups. In the 1840s secondary school teachers founded their local associations in Turku and Vaasa to promote vocational ends. Their application for permission to found a nationwide association was refused by the bureaucracy. More fortunate in their strivings were physicians, or more precisely, the scientific elite of the physicians, who could in Collegium Medicum determine the educational criteria for the specialty. As mentioned earlier, partly due to the prolonged and demanding education, the status of physicians began to rise rapidly during the first decades of the Grand Duchy.Google Scholar

106 K. H. Jarausch,” The German Professions in History and Theory”in Cocks & Jarausch, German Professions 14 (cited in note 1).Google Scholar