This Article will carry on Professor Zacharias’s profound insights and prophecies by examining the trends in direct regulation of attorneys through federal law, with a particular focus on expanding agency regulation. We will also touch on international trends that draw on federal treaty obligations to implement international norms of attorney conduct
This Article examines the impact of the General Agreement on Trade in Services, or GATS, on legal se...
The article discusses the American Bar Association\u27s (ABA\u27s) Standing Committee on Professiona...
The idea behind this Article is Ben Franklin\u27s statement that an ounce of prevention is worth a ...
In his 1994 seminal article on Federalizing Legal Ethics, Prof. Fred Zacharias examined the need for...
This Article is organized as a response to Zaharias’s influential paper, revisiting each of his four...
Federal lawmakers increasingly have taken actions that contradict, interfere with, or preempt state ...
In this Article, I address three aspects of the special and evolving nature of lawyer ethics codes i...
This Article examines the significance of Professor Fred C. Zacharias’s work, What Lawyers Do When N...
Around the globe regulators are rethinking the scope of their mandates and responsibilities. They ar...
We live in a time of unprecedented changes for American lawyers, probably the greatest changes since...
This Article discusses some of the inadequacies in the current ethical regulation of the legal syste...
The great variety of agency rules governing lawyers raises interesting questions that are worth expl...
This Article offers both a way to understand emerging developments in the regulation of the legal pr...
This Article examines the impact of the General Agreement on Trade in Services, or GATS, on legal se...
This Article focuses on those who regulate U.S. laywers. The Article argues that the lawyers who hea...
This Article examines the impact of the General Agreement on Trade in Services, or GATS, on legal se...
The article discusses the American Bar Association\u27s (ABA\u27s) Standing Committee on Professiona...
The idea behind this Article is Ben Franklin\u27s statement that an ounce of prevention is worth a ...
In his 1994 seminal article on Federalizing Legal Ethics, Prof. Fred Zacharias examined the need for...
This Article is organized as a response to Zaharias’s influential paper, revisiting each of his four...
Federal lawmakers increasingly have taken actions that contradict, interfere with, or preempt state ...
In this Article, I address three aspects of the special and evolving nature of lawyer ethics codes i...
This Article examines the significance of Professor Fred C. Zacharias’s work, What Lawyers Do When N...
Around the globe regulators are rethinking the scope of their mandates and responsibilities. They ar...
We live in a time of unprecedented changes for American lawyers, probably the greatest changes since...
This Article discusses some of the inadequacies in the current ethical regulation of the legal syste...
The great variety of agency rules governing lawyers raises interesting questions that are worth expl...
This Article offers both a way to understand emerging developments in the regulation of the legal pr...
This Article examines the impact of the General Agreement on Trade in Services, or GATS, on legal se...
This Article focuses on those who regulate U.S. laywers. The Article argues that the lawyers who hea...
This Article examines the impact of the General Agreement on Trade in Services, or GATS, on legal se...
The article discusses the American Bar Association\u27s (ABA\u27s) Standing Committee on Professiona...
The idea behind this Article is Ben Franklin\u27s statement that an ounce of prevention is worth a ...