First published in 1998, reissued here with a new preface, this volume is the first full-length discussion of womenâs experiences in the solicitorsâ profession in the UK. It provides an account which is grounded in historical research and a contemporary research study. The authors explore this material to analyze both womenâs own experiences and the mainstream culture and structure of the profession. Following a treatment of the struggle against the formal exclusionary barriers to womenâs entry to the profession, this book then seeks to identify the informal obstacles which were subsequently erected to womenâs participation and career progression, and examine their persistence, in a modified form, into the contemporary era. The analysis draws on perspectives from feminist jurisprudence to the sociology of the professions to shed light on the processes which support womenâs continued subordination in employment as lawyers.