Paradoxes of Professional Regulation

In Search of Regulatory Principles

By Michael J. Trebilcock
Categories: Health, Social Work & Psychology, Health & Medicine, Law & Legal Studies, Political Science, Public & Social Policy, Business, Economics & Industry, Economics, Law & Society, Business
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Hardcover : 9781487543044, 168 pages, March 2022
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781487543051, 168 pages, March 2022
Ebook (PDF) : 9781487543068, 168 pages, March 2022

Table of contents

Preface 
1. Introduction: Paradoxes of Professional Regulation: Under and Over-Regulation of Professional Service Markets
2. Regulating Alternative Medicines: Disorder in the Borderlands
3. Regulating Mental Health Care Providers: Building Stronger Signposts through the Maize
4. Financial Advisors and Planners: In Search of Regulatory Principles
5. Regulating Immigration Consultants: Precarity and Exploitation
6. Regulating the Market for Legal Services: Paradoxes of Over and Under-Regulation Within a Single Profession
7. Conclusion:  Reducing the Paradoxes of Professional Regulation

Description

Occupational licensure, including regulation of the professions, dates back to the medieval period. While the guilds that performed this regulatory function have long since vanished, professional regulation continues to this day. For instance, in the United States, 22 per cent of American workers must hold licenses simply to do their jobs. While long-established professions have more settled regulatory paradigms, the case studies in Paradoxes of Professional Regulation explore other professions, taking note of incompetent services and the serious risks they pose to the physical, mental, or emotional health, financial well-being, or legal status of uninformed consumers.

Michael J. Trebilcock examines five case studies of the regulation of diverse professions, including alternative medicine, mental health care provision, financial planning, immigration consulting, and legal services. Noting the widely divergent approaches to the regulation of the same professions across different jurisdictions – paradoxes of professional regulation – the book is an attempt to develop a set of regulatory principles for the future. In its comparative approach, Paradoxes of Professional Regulation gets at the heart of the tensions influencing the regulatory landscape, and works toward practical lessons for bringing greater coherence to the way in which professions are regulated.