The System of Professions
An Essay on the Division of Expert Labor
452 pages,
©
1988
Paper $27.50
ISBN: 9780226000695
Published August 1988
Preface 1. Introduction The Professions Literature The Concept of Professionalization Cases of Professional Development I. Work, Jurisdiction, and Competition 2. Professional Work Objective and Subjective Diagnosis Treatment Inference Academic Knowledge 3. The Claim of Jurisdiction Audiences Settlements Internal Structure 4. The System of Professions The Implications of Exclusion: A System of Professions Sources of Systems Disturbances The Mechanisms of Jurisdiction Shift: Abstractions Conclusion II. The System's Environment 5. Internal Differentiation and the Problem of Power Internal Stratification Client Differentiation Workplace, Workplace Structure, and Internal Divisions of Labor Career Patterns Power 6. The Social Environment of Professional Development Forces Opening and Closing Jurisdictions The Internal Organization of Professional Work Changing Audiences for Jurisdictional Claims Co-optable Powers, Oligarchy, and the New Class 7. The Cultural Environment of Professional Development Changes in the Organization of Knowledge New Forms of Legitimacy The Rise of Universities III. Three Case Studies 8. The Information Professions The Qualitative Task Area The Quantitative Task Area The Combined Jurisdiction 9. Lawyers and Their Competitors Potential Jurisdictional Conflicts of the Legal Profession Complaints about Unqualified Practice and Other Invasions Conclusions 10. The Construction of the Personal Problems Jurisdiction The Status of Personal Problems, 1850-75 The First Response to "American Nervousness" The Psychiatric Revolution The Rise of Psychotherapy Conclusion: The Clergy Surrender 11. Conclusion The System of Professions History Theory and the Professions Notes References Index
Awards
- Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award
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