A large literature has emerged in recent years challenging the standard conception of adversary advocacy that justifies the lawyer in doing anything arguably legal to advance the client\u27s ends. This literature has proposed variations on an ethic that would increase the lawyer\u27s responsibilities to third parties, the public, and substantive ideals of legal merit and justice. With striking consistency, this literature exempts criminal defense from its critique and concedes that the standard adversary ethic may be viable there. This paper criticizes that concession. I argue that the reasons most commonly given to distinguish the criminal from the civil do not warrant a more adversarial ethic in criminal defense. However, I also suggest t...
Most criminal defendants in the United States cannot afford to pay for a lawyer\u27s services, and a...
Criminal defense attorneys are often motivated by an intricate set of moral and ideological principl...
A central and ongoing debate among legal ethics scholars addresses the moral positioning of adversar...
A large literature has emerged in recent years challenging the standard conception of adversary advo...
My own view of criminal defense lawyering owes much to Monroe Freedman. I agree with his traditiona...
I argue that distinctive features of international criminal courts and prosecutions suggest a more f...
Defence lawyers often fight to prevent the conviction of people who have committed serious crimes. H...
We often exhort a prosecutor to be a minister of justice and to seek justice. What do these admo...
The dominant ethic in the American legal profession in 1988 is the adversary ethic. The adversary et...
Notwithstanding the rich scholarly literature debating the proper roles of lawyers and the precise c...
Notwithstanding the rich scholarly literature debating the proper roles of lawyers and the precise c...
In almost any area of legal counseling and advocacy, the lawyer may be faced with the dilemma of eit...
Virtually all authorities agree that the public prosecutor should be held to different standards tha...
Legal ethics is largely concerned with questions of moral permissibility. Is a lawyer morally permit...
This Note examines this dilemma and recent judicial approaches to it. Judges disagree about how guil...
Most criminal defendants in the United States cannot afford to pay for a lawyer\u27s services, and a...
Criminal defense attorneys are often motivated by an intricate set of moral and ideological principl...
A central and ongoing debate among legal ethics scholars addresses the moral positioning of adversar...
A large literature has emerged in recent years challenging the standard conception of adversary advo...
My own view of criminal defense lawyering owes much to Monroe Freedman. I agree with his traditiona...
I argue that distinctive features of international criminal courts and prosecutions suggest a more f...
Defence lawyers often fight to prevent the conviction of people who have committed serious crimes. H...
We often exhort a prosecutor to be a minister of justice and to seek justice. What do these admo...
The dominant ethic in the American legal profession in 1988 is the adversary ethic. The adversary et...
Notwithstanding the rich scholarly literature debating the proper roles of lawyers and the precise c...
Notwithstanding the rich scholarly literature debating the proper roles of lawyers and the precise c...
In almost any area of legal counseling and advocacy, the lawyer may be faced with the dilemma of eit...
Virtually all authorities agree that the public prosecutor should be held to different standards tha...
Legal ethics is largely concerned with questions of moral permissibility. Is a lawyer morally permit...
This Note examines this dilemma and recent judicial approaches to it. Judges disagree about how guil...
Most criminal defendants in the United States cannot afford to pay for a lawyer\u27s services, and a...
Criminal defense attorneys are often motivated by an intricate set of moral and ideological principl...
A central and ongoing debate among legal ethics scholars addresses the moral positioning of adversar...