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summary
Justice and Reform is the first study of the origins, philosophy, creation, management, and impact of the Office of Economic Opportunity Legal Services Program. As such, it clearly and concisely describes the Program's role both as an instrument of equal justice and as a strategy for overcoming poverty. Timely, important, and unique, it tells the story behind the OEO Legal Services Program—an endeavor that has been called both the most successful element of the war on poverty and the most stimulating development to occur in the American legal profession during the Twentieth Century. The early chapters in the book reveal the nature and motivations of the two groups which joined to create the Program: the conservative, American Bar Association sponsored 89-year-old legal aid movement and the Ford Foundation-financed neighborhood lawyer experiments that started in 1962 under the direction of young activist lawyers. Why they merged and how they merged forms the background for a description of how the partners persuaded the OEO bureaucracy to start a legal services program and convinced over 200 communities (including most large cities) to set up a federally funded legal assistance agency. Legal Services Program established policy, how it settled upon "law reform" as the priority function of the Program, how it preserved the integrity of its policies within OEO, and how it caused its grantees to engage in law reform. Chapter 8 evaluates, for the first time, the economic, political, and social impact of the Program as of 1972. The final chapter speculates on the future of government-subsidized legal assistance in the United States from the perspective of the OEO program's twin goals of equal justice and social reform.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title page, Copyright, Dedication
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  1. Contents
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  1. Preface
  2. pp. ix-xiii
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  1. Part I. The Roots
  1. Chapter 1. The Legal Aid Movement and the Goal of Equal Justice
  2. pp. 3-20
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  1. Chapter 2. The Neighborhood Lawyer Experiments and the Goal(s) of Social Reform
  2. pp. 21-36
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  1. Part II. The Establishment of the Program
  1. Chapter 3. Birth of the Federal Program
  2. pp. 39-70
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  1. Chapter 4. Development of Local Legal Services Organizations
  2. pp. 71-102
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  1. Part III. The Management of the Program
  1. Chapter 5. The Policy-Making Process in the Legal Services Program
  2. pp. 105-134
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  1. Chapter 6. "Up the Bureaucracy": Preserving Policy and Program Integrity within the OEO Adminstration
  2. pp. 135-162
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  1. Chapter 7. Implementing National Goals: Affecting the Management of Local Organizations
  2. pp. 163-184
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  1. Part IV. An Assessment
  1. Chapter 8. The First Seven Years: Testing the Potential of Legal Services to the Poor
  2. pp. 187-234
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  1. Chapter 9. Toward Justice and Reform
  2. pp. 235-284
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  1. Appendix I. Comparative Statistical Data
  2. pp. 285-294
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  1. Appendix II. Analysis of Clearinghouse Review
  2. pp. 295-296
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  1. Notes
  2. pp. 297-388
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  1. Bibliography
  2. pp. 389-402
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 403-416
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