Walter Gellhorn
University of Chicago
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University of Chicago Law Review | 1976
Walter Gellhorn
Occupational licensing is invariably justified as a means of protecting the public against incompetent and dishonest practitioners. The effect of mandatory licensure, however, is often to restrict entry into an occupation, thereby reducing competition among established members. Professor Gellhorn finds ample evidence that the proliferation of pseudo professions has adversely affected occupational mobility and economic competition, and warns that even such wellintended proposals as requiring the certification of lawyers with specialized practices may have similar consequences. He concludes that less restrictive forms of licensing should be employed to protect the public against shoddy or fraudulent services without curtailing occupational freedom.
Columbia Law Review | 1966
Walter Gellhorn
Archive | 1956
Walter Gellhorn
Archive | 2003
Walter Gellhorn; Clark Byse
Archive | 1967
Kenneth Culp Davis; Walter Gellhorn
Archive | 1966
John P. Frank; Walter Gellhorn
Archive | 1952
Walter Gellhorn
Archive | 2002
Peter L. Strauss; Todd D. Rakoff; Cynthia R. Farina; Walter Gellhorn; Clark Byse; Gillian E. Metzger
University of Chicago Law Review | 1951
Walter Gellhorn
Columbia Law Review | 1959
Richard McKeon; Robert K. Merton; Walter Gellhorn