The adversary system\u27s pressures can strain the tone and tenor of a lawyer\u27s oral speech, but the strain on civility can be especially great when lawyers write. Words on paper arrive without the facial expression, tone of voice, body language, and contemporaneous opportunity for explanation that can soothe face-to-face communication. Writing appears cold on the page, dependent not necessarily on what the writer intends or implies, but on what readers infer. This article is in three parts. Part I describes two manifestations of incivility, a lawyer\u27s written derision of an opponent, and a lawyer\u27s written disrespect of the court. Part II describes how either manifestation can weaken the client\u27s cause. Part III describes how i...
Professor Abrams authors a column, Writing it Right, in the Journal of the Missouri Bar. In a variet...
As professional writers, attorneys should understand and have command of two of “the worst writing w...
Do lawyers facilitate dispute resolution or do they instead exacerbate conflict and pose a barrier t...
The adversary system\u27s pressures can strain the tone and tenor of a lawyer\u27s oral speech, but ...
Many law students come to law school after being indoctrinated by television and movies, believing t...
As there continue to be incidents of attorneys slapping opposing counsel at depositions, attorneys p...
In recent years, court opinions have chastised counsel’s briefs or other written submissions for suc...
Despite some imperfections across disciplines, advice from well-known fiction and non-fiction writer...
Incivility can undermine the legal profession’s work and effectiveness. However, existing scholarshi...
Historically, the concept of civility has been bound up with undemocratic notions of hierarchy and d...
Virtually all legal writing is atrocious! This is true about (a) statutes and administrative regulat...
This article proposes two controversial assertions about the writing of many lawyers and judges toda...
Despite the rise of voluntary civility codes and calls for professionalism, incivility persists in t...
At most American law schools, legal writing faculty members are treated differently than their count...
This article shows why lawyers must improve their writing skills beyond law school, throughout their...
Professor Abrams authors a column, Writing it Right, in the Journal of the Missouri Bar. In a variet...
As professional writers, attorneys should understand and have command of two of “the worst writing w...
Do lawyers facilitate dispute resolution or do they instead exacerbate conflict and pose a barrier t...
The adversary system\u27s pressures can strain the tone and tenor of a lawyer\u27s oral speech, but ...
Many law students come to law school after being indoctrinated by television and movies, believing t...
As there continue to be incidents of attorneys slapping opposing counsel at depositions, attorneys p...
In recent years, court opinions have chastised counsel’s briefs or other written submissions for suc...
Despite some imperfections across disciplines, advice from well-known fiction and non-fiction writer...
Incivility can undermine the legal profession’s work and effectiveness. However, existing scholarshi...
Historically, the concept of civility has been bound up with undemocratic notions of hierarchy and d...
Virtually all legal writing is atrocious! This is true about (a) statutes and administrative regulat...
This article proposes two controversial assertions about the writing of many lawyers and judges toda...
Despite the rise of voluntary civility codes and calls for professionalism, incivility persists in t...
At most American law schools, legal writing faculty members are treated differently than their count...
This article shows why lawyers must improve their writing skills beyond law school, throughout their...
Professor Abrams authors a column, Writing it Right, in the Journal of the Missouri Bar. In a variet...
As professional writers, attorneys should understand and have command of two of “the worst writing w...
Do lawyers facilitate dispute resolution or do they instead exacerbate conflict and pose a barrier t...