A court – which is the name given the institution charged with resolving legal disputes at retail – is comprised of three elements: an umpire ( judge or jury), disputants, and advocates. The court’s structural purpose is legitimate (which is not the same thing as just) dispute resolution. No part of the court can stand in for the whole; each is only a part. In order for the court to achieve legitimacy, each of its components must pursue partial aims: the umpire must seek truth and justice, the parties must be free to seek advantage, and lawyers must pursue partisan loyalty. Lawyerly partisanship thus stands against truth and justice – the court’s legitimacy requires this. Although rules of legal ethics might constrain hyper-zeal, the legiti...
The question considered in the session was whether the concern of legal ethics is the morality of la...
As the preamble to the Model Code of Judicial Conduct indicates, traditional notions of judicial eth...
Much recent academic discussion exaggerates the distance between plausible legal ethics and ordinary...
A court – which is the name given the institution charged with resolving legal disputes at retail – ...
The fundamental value in judicial ethics is impartiality. This means that a judge is duty-bound to d...
Most violations of judicial ethics appear to be inadvertent. Aside from the few cases where judges d...
With its practical, hands-on approach to legal ethics, the third edition of LEGAL ETHICS is designed...
When legal ethics developed as an academic discipline in the mid-1970s, its theoretical roots were i...
Does the United States Supreme Court decide cases on the basis of moral and ethical value judgments?...
The standards governing how lawyers ought to conduct themselves consist of a number disparate princi...
A court administration striving to guarantee the independence and professionalism of the court and j...
Discussions of legal ethics generally assume that lawyers should deliberate straightforwardly on the...
court administration striving to guarantee the independence and professionalism of the court and jud...
Legal ethics is a disappointing subject. From afar, it seems exciting; it promises to engage the cen...
The authors and moderator David Luban participated in a plenary session of the International Legal E...
The question considered in the session was whether the concern of legal ethics is the morality of la...
As the preamble to the Model Code of Judicial Conduct indicates, traditional notions of judicial eth...
Much recent academic discussion exaggerates the distance between plausible legal ethics and ordinary...
A court – which is the name given the institution charged with resolving legal disputes at retail – ...
The fundamental value in judicial ethics is impartiality. This means that a judge is duty-bound to d...
Most violations of judicial ethics appear to be inadvertent. Aside from the few cases where judges d...
With its practical, hands-on approach to legal ethics, the third edition of LEGAL ETHICS is designed...
When legal ethics developed as an academic discipline in the mid-1970s, its theoretical roots were i...
Does the United States Supreme Court decide cases on the basis of moral and ethical value judgments?...
The standards governing how lawyers ought to conduct themselves consist of a number disparate princi...
A court administration striving to guarantee the independence and professionalism of the court and j...
Discussions of legal ethics generally assume that lawyers should deliberate straightforwardly on the...
court administration striving to guarantee the independence and professionalism of the court and jud...
Legal ethics is a disappointing subject. From afar, it seems exciting; it promises to engage the cen...
The authors and moderator David Luban participated in a plenary session of the International Legal E...
The question considered in the session was whether the concern of legal ethics is the morality of la...
As the preamble to the Model Code of Judicial Conduct indicates, traditional notions of judicial eth...
Much recent academic discussion exaggerates the distance between plausible legal ethics and ordinary...