Morris Ernst\u27s paper is vastly stimulating and commands wide, though not complete, agreement from me. I share his general feeling of pessimism, for I think the legal profession has failed in leadership where most needed. It has been depressing to see our country tending more and more to rigid intellectual conformity, to fear of the future and of change, to loss of that tolerance for individualism and deviation from the norm which has contributed so much to our country\u27s greatness. True, the lawyers here have been little different from the rest of the community. But that is just the reason for despondency. For they should have provided the leaders who could bring us back to reality, as did a Holmes or a Hughes in past crises. Now we ha...
Two recently published books make the claim that the legal profession has changed (Steven Harper’s T...
In recent years, several lawyers and law professors have written books about the decline of ethical ...
My subject is our profession and its future-a future measured not by the condition of its bottom lin...
Morris Ernst\u27s paper is vastly stimulating and commands wide, though not complete, agreement from...
The law is the cornerstone of our society, one of the pillars of civilization, the very “witness … o...
It is interesting to note how the economic situation conditions all things, even the public address....
The legal profession has never been much loved. From Plato through Charles Dickens to Tom Wolfe, lit...
These divergent observations reflect the legal profession’s uneasy relationship with its past. Centr...
In this penetrating book, Jean Stefancic and Richard Delgado use historical investigation and critic...
The American legal profession has been a backward-looking, change-resistant institution. It has fail...
The practice of law has changed and, in the words of Yogi Berra, “[t]he future ain’t what it used to...
We are living in a period of extraordinary unrest. The spirit of criticism is prevalent, and no beli...
I\u27ve been asked by the editor and by Morris Ernst to comment on the latter\u27s paper. I\u27m doi...
At the turn of the twentieth century, the legal profession was rocked in a storm of reform. Among th...
The American legal profession has been a backward-looking, change-resistant institution. It has fail...
Two recently published books make the claim that the legal profession has changed (Steven Harper’s T...
In recent years, several lawyers and law professors have written books about the decline of ethical ...
My subject is our profession and its future-a future measured not by the condition of its bottom lin...
Morris Ernst\u27s paper is vastly stimulating and commands wide, though not complete, agreement from...
The law is the cornerstone of our society, one of the pillars of civilization, the very “witness … o...
It is interesting to note how the economic situation conditions all things, even the public address....
The legal profession has never been much loved. From Plato through Charles Dickens to Tom Wolfe, lit...
These divergent observations reflect the legal profession’s uneasy relationship with its past. Centr...
In this penetrating book, Jean Stefancic and Richard Delgado use historical investigation and critic...
The American legal profession has been a backward-looking, change-resistant institution. It has fail...
The practice of law has changed and, in the words of Yogi Berra, “[t]he future ain’t what it used to...
We are living in a period of extraordinary unrest. The spirit of criticism is prevalent, and no beli...
I\u27ve been asked by the editor and by Morris Ernst to comment on the latter\u27s paper. I\u27m doi...
At the turn of the twentieth century, the legal profession was rocked in a storm of reform. Among th...
The American legal profession has been a backward-looking, change-resistant institution. It has fail...
Two recently published books make the claim that the legal profession has changed (Steven Harper’s T...
In recent years, several lawyers and law professors have written books about the decline of ethical ...
My subject is our profession and its future-a future measured not by the condition of its bottom lin...