ABSTRACT

Over the past 30 years Robert Dingwall has published an influential series of articles on the professions, especially law and medicine. This represents a substantial and coherent body of work in an important sub-discipline of sociology. This volume assembles the best of these writings in one single accessible place. The ten essays are republished in their original form, each bearing the traces of the time and place it was written. In sum, they provide a fascinating account of an academic journey. They are introduced with a foreword from the author, who places the work in context and offers some thoughts about how the work might be used by scholars in developing the field, to evaluate, for example, the effects of the New Labour period on professional autonomy. The essays will be indispensable to sociologists with a general interest in the professions and to scholars of law, medicine and business.

chapter 1|10 pages

The Legacy of Parsons and Hughes

chapter 2|16 pages

Accomplishing Profession

chapter 6|8 pages

Closing the Market

Licensure and English Pharmacy 1794–1868

chapter 7|14 pages

Herbert Spencer and the Professions

Occupational Ecology Reconsidered

chapter 9|16 pages

‘After the Fall …’

Capitulating to the Routine in Professional Work

chapter 10|16 pages

In Memory of Eliot Freidson

Is ‘professional dominance’ an obsolete concept?