Attorney-client confidentiality doctrine is distinguished by its expansiveness and its rigid or categorical form. This brief essay argues that the rationales for these features are unpersuasive. It compares the “strong confidentiality” of current doctrine to a hypothetical narrower and more flexible “moderate confidentiality” and concludes that moderate confidentiality is more plausible. It is unlikely that current doctrine yields benefits that justify its costs
The attorney-client privilege is the oldest evidentiary privilege known to the common law. It exist...
Mediation is a process where a neutral intervener helps disputing parties develop a mutually benefic...
This Comment will investigate the historical problems with confidentiality in mediation and evaluate...
Attorney-client confidentiality doctrine is distinguished by its expansiveness and its rigid or cate...
Broad confidentiality rules with narrow, limited exceptions serve well the interests of attorneys wh...
The proper limits to attorney-client confidentiality are hotly debated by lawyers and legal scholars...
Many lawyers lie to their clients by saying, “Everything you tell me is confidential” despite the ex...
Although the duty to keep client confidences is one of a defense lawyer\u27s defining characteristic...
The privilege of confidentiality between lawyer and client is a significant barrier to the search fo...
The legal profession has yet to deal with important challenges to the traditional image and practice...
In this article, the author examines the problematic aspects of the principle of confidentiality in...
The Sixth Amendment right to counsel is a cornerstone of the American legal system. In order to prov...
New clients often approach legal interviews with fear, anxiety, and nervousness. These feelings and ...
The provisions of the proposed Model Rules of Professional Conduct relating to confidentiality will ...
When a client admits to her lawyer that she is responsible for a crime that someone else has been ch...
The attorney-client privilege is the oldest evidentiary privilege known to the common law. It exist...
Mediation is a process where a neutral intervener helps disputing parties develop a mutually benefic...
This Comment will investigate the historical problems with confidentiality in mediation and evaluate...
Attorney-client confidentiality doctrine is distinguished by its expansiveness and its rigid or cate...
Broad confidentiality rules with narrow, limited exceptions serve well the interests of attorneys wh...
The proper limits to attorney-client confidentiality are hotly debated by lawyers and legal scholars...
Many lawyers lie to their clients by saying, “Everything you tell me is confidential” despite the ex...
Although the duty to keep client confidences is one of a defense lawyer\u27s defining characteristic...
The privilege of confidentiality between lawyer and client is a significant barrier to the search fo...
The legal profession has yet to deal with important challenges to the traditional image and practice...
In this article, the author examines the problematic aspects of the principle of confidentiality in...
The Sixth Amendment right to counsel is a cornerstone of the American legal system. In order to prov...
New clients often approach legal interviews with fear, anxiety, and nervousness. These feelings and ...
The provisions of the proposed Model Rules of Professional Conduct relating to confidentiality will ...
When a client admits to her lawyer that she is responsible for a crime that someone else has been ch...
The attorney-client privilege is the oldest evidentiary privilege known to the common law. It exist...
Mediation is a process where a neutral intervener helps disputing parties develop a mutually benefic...
This Comment will investigate the historical problems with confidentiality in mediation and evaluate...