A Review of A Nation Under Lawyers: How the Crisis In the Legal Profession is Transforming American Society by Mary Ann Glendo
Published as Chapter 3 in The Cambridge History of Law in America, Volume II, The Long Nineteenth Ce...
A Review of The Litigation Explosion: What Happened When America Unleashed the Lawsuit by Walter K....
Unequal Justice is a social history of the legal profession from the emergence of The American Bar A...
A Review of A Nation Under Lawyers: How the Crisis In the Legal Profession is Transforming American...
In these two lively, elegant, and lucid books, Mary Ann Glendon points to an increasing bloody-minde...
A Review of The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession by Anthony T. Kronman
Lawyers and Their Work; An Analysis of the Legal Profession in the United States and England. By Qui...
Distinguished scholars in law and the social sciences examine the state of American legal culture, p...
Lawyer-bashing in America has long been a national pastime, having somehow escaped the palliative of...
Are we over-lawyered? The answer that a lawyer must give is the kind of response that always exasper...
The average modern American, when asked to think of what a modern successful lawyer looks like, woul...
The increasing belief among many lawyers that life is comprised of fear and greed and money has al...
Lawyers in the United States work in public service, private counseling, and dispute resolution, but...
What\u27s wrong with us lawyers? Mainly, it is that the worst among us pose for our portrait, so tha...
An historic transformation is underway in the legal profession. It began about 40 years ago, but it ...
Published as Chapter 3 in The Cambridge History of Law in America, Volume II, The Long Nineteenth Ce...
A Review of The Litigation Explosion: What Happened When America Unleashed the Lawsuit by Walter K....
Unequal Justice is a social history of the legal profession from the emergence of The American Bar A...
A Review of A Nation Under Lawyers: How the Crisis In the Legal Profession is Transforming American...
In these two lively, elegant, and lucid books, Mary Ann Glendon points to an increasing bloody-minde...
A Review of The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession by Anthony T. Kronman
Lawyers and Their Work; An Analysis of the Legal Profession in the United States and England. By Qui...
Distinguished scholars in law and the social sciences examine the state of American legal culture, p...
Lawyer-bashing in America has long been a national pastime, having somehow escaped the palliative of...
Are we over-lawyered? The answer that a lawyer must give is the kind of response that always exasper...
The average modern American, when asked to think of what a modern successful lawyer looks like, woul...
The increasing belief among many lawyers that life is comprised of fear and greed and money has al...
Lawyers in the United States work in public service, private counseling, and dispute resolution, but...
What\u27s wrong with us lawyers? Mainly, it is that the worst among us pose for our portrait, so tha...
An historic transformation is underway in the legal profession. It began about 40 years ago, but it ...
Published as Chapter 3 in The Cambridge History of Law in America, Volume II, The Long Nineteenth Ce...
A Review of The Litigation Explosion: What Happened When America Unleashed the Lawsuit by Walter K....
Unequal Justice is a social history of the legal profession from the emergence of The American Bar A...