The American legal profession has been a backward-looking, change-resistant institution. It has failed to adjust to changes in society, technology, and economics, despite individual lawyers\u27 efforts to change their own practices and entrepreneurs\u27 efforts to enter the legal marketplace to serve the needs of middle- and lower-income clients. When change does come, the legal profession is a late- arriver, usually doing no better than catching up to changes around it that have already become well ensconced. This failure robs society of what could be a positive role of the legal profession in times of change, and it deprives the profession itself of being as robust and successful as it could be
The public believes that the practice of law has become a business.They also believe that lawyers ar...
We live in a time of unprecedented changes for American lawyers, probably the greatest changes since...
Published as Chapter 6 in The Paradox of Professionalism: Lawyers and the Possibility of Justice, Sc...
The American legal profession has been a backward-looking, change-resistant institution. It has fail...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
This paper considers how US courts, which regulate the US legal profession, should respond to the pe...
The accounts of how the legal profession has changed in recent years are as abundant as the changes ...
This paper has sought to show that the current framework of professional regulation is unlikely to ...
Lawyers in the United States work in public service, private counseling, and dispute resolution, but...
The past two decades have witnessed extraordinary changes that will have a lasting impact on the str...
Around the globe regulators are rethinking the scope of their mandates and responsibilities. They ar...
For generations, the legal profession has assumed that only individual lawyers practice law. Ethical...
Technology is changing the way we do business. It has made cross-border trade in goods and services ...
The law is the cornerstone of our society, one of the pillars of civilization, the very “witness … o...
Dissatisfaction with lawyers is a chronic grievance, and inspires periodiccalls for reform. Neverthe...
The public believes that the practice of law has become a business.They also believe that lawyers ar...
We live in a time of unprecedented changes for American lawyers, probably the greatest changes since...
Published as Chapter 6 in The Paradox of Professionalism: Lawyers and the Possibility of Justice, Sc...
The American legal profession has been a backward-looking, change-resistant institution. It has fail...
The article discusses the criticism raised against legal education including high cost, disconnectio...
This paper considers how US courts, which regulate the US legal profession, should respond to the pe...
The accounts of how the legal profession has changed in recent years are as abundant as the changes ...
This paper has sought to show that the current framework of professional regulation is unlikely to ...
Lawyers in the United States work in public service, private counseling, and dispute resolution, but...
The past two decades have witnessed extraordinary changes that will have a lasting impact on the str...
Around the globe regulators are rethinking the scope of their mandates and responsibilities. They ar...
For generations, the legal profession has assumed that only individual lawyers practice law. Ethical...
Technology is changing the way we do business. It has made cross-border trade in goods and services ...
The law is the cornerstone of our society, one of the pillars of civilization, the very “witness … o...
Dissatisfaction with lawyers is a chronic grievance, and inspires periodiccalls for reform. Neverthe...
The public believes that the practice of law has become a business.They also believe that lawyers ar...
We live in a time of unprecedented changes for American lawyers, probably the greatest changes since...
Published as Chapter 6 in The Paradox of Professionalism: Lawyers and the Possibility of Justice, Sc...