This Article examines the structural evolution of the firm counsel position from a volunteer, part-time position filled by an existing partner to a specialized, often full-time position increasingly filled by career in-house counsel. Based on focus groups and interviews with firm counsel, as well as participant observation at meetings and conferences aimed at firm counsel, I examine how the professionalization of the firm counsel position affects: (1) the definition of the firm as the client; (2) the authority of firm counsel with partners; and (3) firm counsels\u27 professional commitments and attitudes about ethical rules. I find that, from a regulatory standpoint, the professionalization of firm counsel is a positive development. The i...
This Article offers both a way to understand emerging developments in the regulation of the legal pr...
In the law of business organizations, individuals have generally been unrestrained in choosing which...
The focus of this Article will be law schools\u27 specific role and responsibility in the propaedeut...
This Article examines the structural evolution of the firm counsel position from a volunteer, part...
In this Article, Professor Munneke continues the debate over ethical rules governing lawyers\u27 pro...
This article addresses the increasing trend in law firms appointing general counsel. Part I of this ...
This article examines two principal hypotheses: Hypothesis 1: Law firm investments in clients dimini...
For generations, the legal profession has assumed that only individual lawyers practice law. Ethical...
Lawyering has changed dramatically in the past century, but scholarly and regulatory models have fai...
The number of lawyers who practice law in-house has significantly increased over the last thirty yea...
To advance the discourse related to law firm ethics and the impact of formal controls and informal i...
Both Dean Kronman in The Lost Lawyer and Professor Glendon in A Nation Under Lawyers attribute some ...
This Article introduces the concept of the law school firm. The concept calls for law schools to est...
This working paper assembles empirical data from England, Australia and the United States indicating...
The academic literature on large law firms emphasizes the limited authority of professional managers...
This Article offers both a way to understand emerging developments in the regulation of the legal pr...
In the law of business organizations, individuals have generally been unrestrained in choosing which...
The focus of this Article will be law schools\u27 specific role and responsibility in the propaedeut...
This Article examines the structural evolution of the firm counsel position from a volunteer, part...
In this Article, Professor Munneke continues the debate over ethical rules governing lawyers\u27 pro...
This article addresses the increasing trend in law firms appointing general counsel. Part I of this ...
This article examines two principal hypotheses: Hypothesis 1: Law firm investments in clients dimini...
For generations, the legal profession has assumed that only individual lawyers practice law. Ethical...
Lawyering has changed dramatically in the past century, but scholarly and regulatory models have fai...
The number of lawyers who practice law in-house has significantly increased over the last thirty yea...
To advance the discourse related to law firm ethics and the impact of formal controls and informal i...
Both Dean Kronman in The Lost Lawyer and Professor Glendon in A Nation Under Lawyers attribute some ...
This Article introduces the concept of the law school firm. The concept calls for law schools to est...
This working paper assembles empirical data from England, Australia and the United States indicating...
The academic literature on large law firms emphasizes the limited authority of professional managers...
This Article offers both a way to understand emerging developments in the regulation of the legal pr...
In the law of business organizations, individuals have generally been unrestrained in choosing which...
The focus of this Article will be law schools\u27 specific role and responsibility in the propaedeut...