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The Rural Lawyer

The Rural Lawyer

The Rural Lawyer

How To Incentivize Rural Law Practice and Help Small Communities Thrive
Hannah Haksgaard, University of South Dakota
March 2025
Available
Paperback
9781009542838

    The Rural Lawyer takes a close look at the challenges facing small-town America, where populations are dwindling and aging lawyers are not being replaced by new graduates. With interviews and personal accounts, the book shows how incentive programs can address this access-to-justice crisis. It specifically examines the South Dakota Rural Attorney Recruitment Program, which is the first program of its kind in the US and has seen great success in helping to attract new lawyers to small towns. Chapters also explore the larger context of rural economic development and its relationship to the law. With insightful analysis and real-life examples, The Rural Lawyer provides readers with a deep understanding of the challenges facing rural communities and the role that lawyers can play in helping these areas thrive.

    • Provides the first in-depth look at how an incentive program for rural lawyers has worked in practice
    • Contains first-hand data, interviews, and narrative stories about the rural practice of law
    • Offers a glimpse into what rural lawyering is like for a new graduate

    Reviews & endorsements

    ‘This rich and loving portrait of life and law practice in rural South Dakota traces the first ten years of the state’s Rural Attorney Recruitment Program, a pioneering effort to recruit new lawyers to rural communities through direct stipends. Based on in-depth interviews with the first 32 participating lawyers, mentoring attorneys, and key players who brought the program into existence, Haksgaard examines the challenges of building a rural law practice, the importance of community ties and acceptance, and what lawyers bring to rural communities through volunteer and local government work as well as paid private practice. The book is a must-read for bar leaders and scholars of the legal profession, as well as a primer for policy-makers aiming to promote and sustain rural communities.’ Elizabeth Chambliss, Henry Harman Edens Professor of Law Director, University of South Carolina

    ’Hannah Haskgaard’s study of the Rural Attorney Recruitment Program offers ground-breaking new insights into rural legal practice during the devastating rural lawyer shortage of the twenty-first century. Through intimate interviews with program participants, the book is a compelling tribute to rural lawyers and South Dakota’s efforts to ensure its rural communities prosper.’ Emily Prifogle, Assistant Professor of Law, University of Michigan Law School

    ‘Haksgaard supplies important data and insights that will be invaluable for legal system stakeholders wishing to ameliorate the rural attorney shortage. The book will also be very useful to policymakers and scholars seeking to support the economic development of rural communities.’ Lisa Pruitt, Distinguished Professor of Law, UC Davis School of Law

    See more reviews

    Product details

    March 2025
    Paperback
    9781009542838
    203 pages
    228 × 150 × 12 mm
    0.292kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. The rural lawyer
    • 3. Policy responses
    • 4. Choosing rural practice
    • 5. Entering a rural community
    • 6. Acceptance
    • 7. Legal work
    • 8. Mentorship
    • 9. The finances of practice
    • 10. Community impact
    • 11. Staying or leaving
    • 12. Conclusion.
      Author
    • Hannah Haksgaard , University of South Dakota

      Hannah Haksgaard is a Professor at the University of South Dakota Knudson School of Law. Hannah has written extensively about the rural lawyer shortage, with two prior book chapters and seven prior law review articles on the topic.