Professors Thomas L. Shaffer and Robert F. Cochran, Jr., state that an attorney, vis-ý-vis her client, acts as either (1) a godfather; (2) a hired gun; (3) a guru; or (4) a friend. These paradigms principally differ as to the extent to which the attorney, rather than the client, controls the relationship and the degree to which the interests of persons other than the client are deemed important. Shaffer and Cochran contend that the friend model is to be preferred. As the client\u27s friend, the attorney not only considers which possible decision would be ethically correct but she engages her client in moral discourse so that the client may make the ethically correct decision. However, the attorney does not attempt to manipulate the client i...
Assists attorneys to identify the ambiguities inherent in the law of negotiable instruments. Clarifi...
The American Bar Association recently revised the ethical rules that govern lawyers. Its Ethics 2000...
The Internet is becoming the primary manner in which some attorneys serve clients. States have alrea...
Professors Thomas L. Shaffer and Robert F. Cochran, Jr., state that an attorney, vis-ý-vis her clien...
By practicing law, Jewish attorneys can promote many important Jewish values. For example, they can ...
Can desirable ends justify what would otherwise be undesirable means? The answers to this question d...
In Hebrew, the process of earning a living is sometimes referred to as Milhemet ha-Hayyim (literally...
Many lawyers face the challenge of adhering to the idealistic principles of objective client-centere...
Jewish law pervasively impacts corporate conduct, but does so without positing any distinct doctrina...
The Jewish approach to debtor-creditor law is distinguished for its early, pro-debtor features, incl...
A person\u27s self-perception of his or her Jewish identity can have a profound impact on one\u27s p...
This article explores two related, but distinct, questions: (1) whether, under Jewish law, it is eth...
Jewish law highly prizes human life. It strongly promotes human reproduction and the protection of h...
This Article examines how a lawyer may handle conflicts that arise when counseling clients on bioeth...
Analyzing Rule 1.6 of the Model Rules from a Jewish perspective can help solve some of the conflicts...
Assists attorneys to identify the ambiguities inherent in the law of negotiable instruments. Clarifi...
The American Bar Association recently revised the ethical rules that govern lawyers. Its Ethics 2000...
The Internet is becoming the primary manner in which some attorneys serve clients. States have alrea...
Professors Thomas L. Shaffer and Robert F. Cochran, Jr., state that an attorney, vis-ý-vis her clien...
By practicing law, Jewish attorneys can promote many important Jewish values. For example, they can ...
Can desirable ends justify what would otherwise be undesirable means? The answers to this question d...
In Hebrew, the process of earning a living is sometimes referred to as Milhemet ha-Hayyim (literally...
Many lawyers face the challenge of adhering to the idealistic principles of objective client-centere...
Jewish law pervasively impacts corporate conduct, but does so without positing any distinct doctrina...
The Jewish approach to debtor-creditor law is distinguished for its early, pro-debtor features, incl...
A person\u27s self-perception of his or her Jewish identity can have a profound impact on one\u27s p...
This article explores two related, but distinct, questions: (1) whether, under Jewish law, it is eth...
Jewish law highly prizes human life. It strongly promotes human reproduction and the protection of h...
This Article examines how a lawyer may handle conflicts that arise when counseling clients on bioeth...
Analyzing Rule 1.6 of the Model Rules from a Jewish perspective can help solve some of the conflicts...
Assists attorneys to identify the ambiguities inherent in the law of negotiable instruments. Clarifi...
The American Bar Association recently revised the ethical rules that govern lawyers. Its Ethics 2000...
The Internet is becoming the primary manner in which some attorneys serve clients. States have alrea...