This study analyzes Chicago lawyers' networks of relationships with a
selected set of prominent practitioners, drawing on 1994-95 interviews
with 788 randomly selected respondents. Since the same technique was
used 20 years earlier, the research sheds light on the extent to which
the constituencies of elite Chicago lawyers have changed. The network
is organized in three principal sectors-liberals, trial lawyers, and
corporate lawyers. The structure implies a lack of integration within
the bar. Minorities and women are now more widely dispersed across the
segments of the network than they were in 1975, but they still have r
elatively few connections in the corporate sector of the bar.