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Nearly 200 interviews with legal services lawyers and
administrators, bar association officers, judges, and political
officials form the basis for this book on the delivery of civil
legal services to the poor. Beginning with a brief history of legal
assistance programs, Kessler examines the operation of five local
programs funded by the national Legal Services Corporation. The
activities of poverty lawyers in urban, rural, and suburban
settings are described and analyzed and the author offers an
explanation for variables in service based on the constraints
imposed by the interorganizational environment. The implications of
his findings are examined from the perspective of existing theories
of organizational behavior, the system's potential for effecting
political and legal reform, and current political debates
surrounding the future of the Legal Services Corporation.
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