This negative image of lawyers as a dishonest profession which feeds on the innocent's miseries is almost as old as the legal profession and has sometimes resulted in shortsighted, emotional and retrogressive measures against the legal profession such as its abolition in France soon after the 1789 Revolution and in Russia in the aftermath of the 1917 Socialist Revolution. In contrast to the above perceptions, lawyers often see themselves and their profession as custodians of every society's civilisation. For example, Justice Maugham has argued that "lawyers are the custodians of civilisations than which there can be no higher aim and nobler duty"
These divergent observations reflect the legal profession’s uneasy relationship with its past. Centr...
Examining legal ethics within the framework of modern practice, this book identifies two important e...
In recent years, several lawyers and law professors have written books about the decline of ethical ...
This negative image of lawyers as a dishonest profession which feeds on the innocent's miseries is a...
The legal profession has never been much loved. From Plato through Charles Dickens to Tom Wolfe, lit...
Lawyers are said to travel in packs, or at least pairs, and in the popular parlance are often compar...
Approaching the legal profession through the lens of cultural history, Wes Pue explores the social r...
In The Practice of Justice, William Simon addresses a widely recognized dilemma -- the moral degrada...
One of the most striking things to notice when looking back on the regulation of the legal profess...
A great French judge truly said that the profession of the law was as old as the Magistrate, as nob...
Distinguished scholars in law and the social sciences examine the state of American legal culture, p...
Fifteen lawyers were asked a series of questions pertaining to their life experiences as members of ...
One reason for the popular dislike of lawyers is that they do notthink like human beings. No doubt t...
Published as Chapter 6 in The Paradox of Professionalism: Lawyers and the Possibility of Justice, Sc...
The regulation of lawyers\u27 behavior remains a controversial topic. Over the past hundred years, t...
These divergent observations reflect the legal profession’s uneasy relationship with its past. Centr...
Examining legal ethics within the framework of modern practice, this book identifies two important e...
In recent years, several lawyers and law professors have written books about the decline of ethical ...
This negative image of lawyers as a dishonest profession which feeds on the innocent's miseries is a...
The legal profession has never been much loved. From Plato through Charles Dickens to Tom Wolfe, lit...
Lawyers are said to travel in packs, or at least pairs, and in the popular parlance are often compar...
Approaching the legal profession through the lens of cultural history, Wes Pue explores the social r...
In The Practice of Justice, William Simon addresses a widely recognized dilemma -- the moral degrada...
One of the most striking things to notice when looking back on the regulation of the legal profess...
A great French judge truly said that the profession of the law was as old as the Magistrate, as nob...
Distinguished scholars in law and the social sciences examine the state of American legal culture, p...
Fifteen lawyers were asked a series of questions pertaining to their life experiences as members of ...
One reason for the popular dislike of lawyers is that they do notthink like human beings. No doubt t...
Published as Chapter 6 in The Paradox of Professionalism: Lawyers and the Possibility of Justice, Sc...
The regulation of lawyers\u27 behavior remains a controversial topic. Over the past hundred years, t...
These divergent observations reflect the legal profession’s uneasy relationship with its past. Centr...
Examining legal ethics within the framework of modern practice, this book identifies two important e...
In recent years, several lawyers and law professors have written books about the decline of ethical ...