Preface
Introduction
PART I: CHANGE
Chapter 1: The Grand Bargain
Chapter 2: From the Vanguard
Chapter 3: Patterns Across the Professions
PART II: THEORY
Chapter 4: Information and Technology
Chapter 5: Production and Distribution of Knowledge
PART III - IMPLICATIONS
Chapter 6: Objections and Anxieties
Chapter 7: After the Professions
Conclusion What Future Should We Want?
Professor Richard Susskind OBE is an author, speaker, and
independent
adviser to international professional firms and national
governments.
He is President of the Society for Computers and Law, IT Adviser to
the
Lord
Chief Justice of England, and Chair of the Advisory Board of the
Oxford
Internet Institute. His numerous books include the best-sellers,
The End
of Lawyers? (OUP, 2008) and Tomorrow's Lawyers (OUP, 2013), his
work
has been translated into more than 10 languages, and he has been
invited
to speak in over 40 countries.Daniel Susskind is a Lecturer in
Economics at Balliol College, Oxford, where he teaches and
researches,
and from where he has two degrees in economics. Previously, he
worked
for the British Government - in the Prime Minister's Strategy Unit,
in
the Policy Unit in 10 Downing Street, and as a Senior Policy
Adviser at
the Cabinet Office. He was a Kennedy Scholar at
Harvard University.
Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind's recent work, The Future of
the Professions: How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human
Experts, is a fascinating and very thought-provoking book
*Jonathan Westover, Utah Valley University, Sociological Research
Online*
Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind's recent work, The Future of
the Professions: How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human
Experts, is a fascinating and very thought-provoking book
*Jonathan Westover, Utah Valley University, Sociological Research
Online*
The prognosis is persuasive.
*Kevin Stannard, Conference & Common Room*
Compelling reading.
*Greg Wildisen, New Law Journal*
It should be read by any information professional concerned about
the future.
*Tom Wilson, Information Research*
Impeccably researched and compelling... The Future of the
Professions is a must read for all professionals and policy
makers.
*Kathy Laster, Law and Courts in an Online World*
Interesting and highly pertinent... The authors have written an
interesting polemic that ought to be read by those that do not
know.
*Digital Evidence and Electronic Signature Law Review*
Richard and Daniel Susskind's The Future of the Professions: How
technology will transform the work of human experts (Oxford)
belongs to a new genre of reflection and prediction. It is no
Luddite lament for a world we have lost, but surveys rapid change
with insight and optimism.
*Jonathan Clark, Books of the Year 2016, Times Literary
Supplement*
The Future of the Professions: How Technology Will Transform the
Work of Human Experts, is a must read for anyone who wants to gain
insights into where the legal profession is going ... Nothing else
I have read more clearly and convincingly elucidates the future of
legal services and how technology will transform the traditional
practice of law.
*Dan Pinnington, Slaw.*
Books of the Year 2015: Best Books 2015
*Lorien Kite, Financial Times*
Books of the Year 2015
*New Scientist*
Perhaps the forthcoming tidal wave of technology set to engulf us
all will throw up new opportunities for the legal profession —
which is probably why just about every lawyer in London, so we are
told, has bought a copy of this challenging, provocative, timely
and important book. If you care about the future of your profession
and wish to add further comment to the raging controversies
surrounding it, better get yourself a copy now.
*Phillip Taylor MBE and Elizabeth Taylor of Richard Green
Chambers*
In The Future of the Professions, father-and-son authors Richard
and Daniel Susskind do a remorselessly effective job of demolishing
the self-deception most people engage in when comparing themselves
to machines.
*Richard Waters, Financial Times*
The authors are undoubtedly right that the professions will change
more in the next quarter-century than they have in the previous
three.
*The Economist*
Remarkable work
*Tom Watson, The Guardian*
This is a bold book ... The Future of the Professions helps us to
recognise the professions' current methods as convoluted,
self-serving rituals designed to wrap simple tasks in mystique.
*Giles Wilkes, Prospect*
The Future of the Professions is a paradox that only a human mind
could appreciate: the inevitable death of the professions is
presented in an expert, original and witty work by two
professionals whose skills (in thinking, writing and consultancy)
are unlikely any time soon to be replicated by a machine.
*David Pannick, The Times*
An act of delicious iconoclasm.
*Prospect Magazine*
Both a good read and a good starter for strategic planning in
professional firms
*Chris Yapp, Future Tech Blog*
I suggest that everyone who considers themselves 'professional'
reads this book, especially those who are aged, say, 20-45, who
need to secure their role in the new world of work. The authors
predict that "our professions will be dismantled incrementally". If
they are right, todays lawyers need to prepare for it, and the
sooner the better.
*Dan Bindman, Legal Futures*
A fascinating and challenging book
*Medium*
The study is exceptionally well informed and important contribution
to thinking about the future of professional work
*Network Review*
As the saying is, the future is now and we ignore it at our peril.
Please read this book.
*Law Skills*
the book is written in a relaxed, flowing and easily-consumable
style ... a read of the Future of the Professions is time very
well-spent.
*Jeremy Hopkins, Future of Law*
Impeccably researched and compelling ... The Future of the
Professions is a must read for all professionals and policy
makers
*Law and Courts in an Online World*
Everyone interested in the future well-being of society must read
this thoroughly researched and compelling book - to understand how
technology can and will be used to enable the public to do far more
for themselves. In reshaping our system of justice so that it can
more cost-effectively underpin our democratic society and its
prosperity, I have had the benefit of the Susskinds core thesis how
to use technology not simply to enable the legal professions to do
better what they now do, but to reshape justice for the benefit of
the public.
*Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd, Lord Chief Justice of England and
Wales*
If the Susskinds are right we are at the start of a social
revolution. Technology has begun to transform social class,
economic activity, political discourse, working life and the limits
of human activity. In The Future of the Professions they
relentlessly and unyieldingly but also entertainingly and elegantly
set about proving their point. I started knowing that their
argument was important, I finished convinced that it was right.
This is a necessary book. It was necessary that it be written and
necessary that you read it.
*Daniel Finkelstein, The Times*
Impressive new book
*Edward Fennell, The Times*
I know of no better book for anyone interested in the future of
skilled jobs and society. Drawing on an astounding range of sources
and the latest research, The Future of the Professions offers vital
insights into the unprecedented disruption facing all the
professions.
*Professor Ian Goldin, Professor of Globalisation and Development
and Director of the Oxford Martin School, University of
Oxford.*
In this magisterial survey Richard and Daniel Susskind demolish
each profession's faith in its immutable uniqueness. Instead they
trace inexorable and universal forces that will drive
disintermediation, deconstruction and disruption. Written with
scholarly thoroughness, this is an urgent manifesto and practical
blueprint for the leaders of every professional firm.
*Philip Evans, Senior Partner & BCG Fellow, The Boston Consulting
Group*
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