Tasks, stratification and occupational change : evidence from the legal profession

Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2019

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Riordan, Christine A.(Christine Ann)
Other Authors: Paul Osterman.
Format: Thesis
Language:eng
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/121837
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author Riordan, Christine A.(Christine Ann)
author2 Paul Osterman.
author_facet Paul Osterman.
Riordan, Christine A.(Christine Ann)
author_sort Riordan, Christine A.(Christine Ann)
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description Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2019
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spelling mit-1721.1/1218372019-11-21T03:04:41Z Tasks, stratification and occupational change : evidence from the legal profession Riordan, Christine A.(Christine Ann) Paul Osterman. Sloan School of Management. Sloan School of Management Sloan School of Management. Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2019 Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. Includes bibliographical references. The organization of professional work-that of lawyers, doctors, and accountants, among others-is undergoing change. One of the most notable changes is the disaggregation of work processes, or the unbundling of work into component tasks and their allocation to different sources of labor. The legal profession, and specifically the corporate law firms and clients that make up the profession's "core", is increasingly subject to such reorganization. An emerging hypothesis is that this unbundling and reallocation of tasks underpins new forms of stratification. This dissertation explores the extent to which tasks underpin the distribution of opportunities and rewards that come to define occupational stratification in law. In the first essay, I show how market pressures-specifically, rooted in changing firm-client relationships, incongruities in law firm business models, and increased competition from alternative legal service providers-contributes to occupational change by transforming law firms' division of labor and its tasks. The precise implications of such transformation remain unclear, as tasks are not typically examined as a mechanism of professional stratification. The next two essays aim to bring clarity to this issue. In each, I build from an emerging model of task-based stratification found in work design and organizational scholarship. In this model, tasks are theorized to underpin stratification through their technical, social, and subjective characteristics, doing so in ways that hinge on their status. I examine this model first using qualitative data collected in two major legal markets, showing that the disaggregation of tasks that vary by status shapes divergent opportunity structures related to skill, social resources, and signals of professional status, such professional expertise and autonomy, which reinforce existing stratification in new ways. The third essay builds on these insights, using both fieldwork and survey data to test the relationship between task status and occupational outcomes more systematically. My findings show that certain high- and low-status tasks are associated with three forms of social resources, mostly in the expected direction. Yet nuance in these relationships suggests further refinement and new conditions of the model. These findings raise implications for task-based stratification and stratification in the profession more generally. by Christine A. Riordan. Ph. D. Ph.D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management 2019-07-18T20:35:19Z 2019-07-18T20:35:19Z 2019 2019 Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/121837 1108621406 eng MIT theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed, downloaded, or printed from this source but further reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. http://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/7582 133 pages application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Sloan School of Management.
Riordan, Christine A.(Christine Ann)
Tasks, stratification and occupational change : evidence from the legal profession
title Tasks, stratification and occupational change : evidence from the legal profession
title_full Tasks, stratification and occupational change : evidence from the legal profession
title_fullStr Tasks, stratification and occupational change : evidence from the legal profession
title_full_unstemmed Tasks, stratification and occupational change : evidence from the legal profession
title_short Tasks, stratification and occupational change : evidence from the legal profession
title_sort tasks stratification and occupational change evidence from the legal profession
topic Sloan School of Management.
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/121837
work_keys_str_mv AT riordanchristineachristineann tasksstratificationandoccupationalchangeevidencefromthelegalprofession