Front cover image for Exclusions practicing prejudice in French law and medicine, 1920-1945

Exclusions practicing prejudice in French law and medicine, 1920-1945

Julie Fette shows in Exclusions that doctors and lawyers persuaded the French state to enact exclusionary legislation banning naturalized citizens from careers in law and medicine for up to ten years after they had obtained French nationality.
Print Book, English, c2012
Cornell University Press, Ithaca, c2012
History
xi, 314 p.
1200884100
Introduction1. The Nineteenth-Century Origins of Exclusion in the Professions2. Defense of the Corps: The Medical Mobilization against Foreigners and Naturalized Citizens3. The Art of Medicine: Access and Status4. The Barrier of the Law Bar5. Citizens into Lawyers: Extra Assimilation Required6. Lawyers during the Vichy Regime: Exclusion in the Law7. L'Ordre des Médecins: Corporatist Debut and Anti-Semitic ClimaxConclusion: Postwar Continuities and the Rupture of Public ApologyNotesBibliographyIndex
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