There has been a shift in consumer behavior over the last several decades. To keep up with the transforming consumer, many professions have changed the way they do business. Yet lawyers continue to deliver services the way they have since the founding of our country. Bar associations and legal ethicists have long debated the idea of allowing lawyers to practice in “alternative business structures,” where lawyers and nonlawyers can co-own and co-manage a business to deliver legal services. This Article argues these types of businesses inhibit lawyers’ ability to provide better legal services to the public and that the legal profession’s resistance to change is not in the best interest of the public nor the profession
In the past fifty years, one has heard debates about whether law is a business, a profession, or bot...
This Article provides information about a new method to shop for legal services, reinventing the way...
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Alternative Business Structure (ABS) law firms in the United Kingdom allow for non-lawyer owners and...
Rules prohibiting nonlawyers from holding ownership or managerial interests in law firms remain on t...
This article focuses on three current professionalism challenges in the U.S. legal profession: (i) t...
Technology is changing the way we do business. It has made cross-border trade in goods and services ...
The Article explains how the Professionalism Paradigm distinguishes between self-interested business...
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When the Legal Services Act 2007 came into force , it was heralded as ushering in “important opportu...
The legal profession’s control of much of the market for legal services is justified by the claim th...
Imagine that someone asks you how legal services are regulated in the United States. You might answe...
Those who frequent our courthouses and work with low and moderate - income individuals have no illus...
In the past fifty years, one has heard debates about whether law is a business, a profession, or bot...
This Article provides information about a new method to shop for legal services, reinventing the way...
The professions of the 1980s are completely different from the situation in the 1930s. They are now ...
50 pagesThis Article begins by looking at formulations of law practice from a European perspective, ...
Alternative Business Structure (ABS) law firms in the United Kingdom allow for non-lawyer owners and...
Rules prohibiting nonlawyers from holding ownership or managerial interests in law firms remain on t...
This article focuses on three current professionalism challenges in the U.S. legal profession: (i) t...
Technology is changing the way we do business. It has made cross-border trade in goods and services ...
The Article explains how the Professionalism Paradigm distinguishes between self-interested business...
For decades, lawyers have been complaining that they hate working at law firms, and clients have exp...
This Article explores a new and interesting question in the area of professional responsibility: How...
When the Legal Services Act 2007 came into force , it was heralded as ushering in “important opportu...
The legal profession’s control of much of the market for legal services is justified by the claim th...
Imagine that someone asks you how legal services are regulated in the United States. You might answe...
Those who frequent our courthouses and work with low and moderate - income individuals have no illus...
In the past fifty years, one has heard debates about whether law is a business, a profession, or bot...
This Article provides information about a new method to shop for legal services, reinventing the way...
The professions of the 1980s are completely different from the situation in the 1930s. They are now ...