The author revisits criticisms of the civility movement made in an earlier paper ( Does Civility Matter? (2008) 46 Osgoode Hall LJ 175). She argues that Canadian law societies remain concerned with lawyer incivility, despite bringing surprisingly few formal prosecutions against lawyers for incivility. In a few cases the law societies\u27 concern can be justified insofar as lawyer incivility in those cases appears to correlate with serious professional dysfunction. Generally however, the focus on incivility is counter-productive. First, in several cases the focus on lawyer incivility elides the complex and difficult ethical issues raised by the behaviour of the lawyers in question. Disciplining lawyers for incivility when their conduct was ...
Canadian legal ethics has paid little attention to how the rules of professional conduct for lawyers...
Discusses the role of judges when cases of civil disobedience are brought before the court
The legal profession has never been much loved. From Plato through Charles Dickens to Tom Wolfe, lit...
Recent discussion of legal ethics in Canada has focused on the importance of civility as a fundame...
Despite the rise of voluntary civility codes and calls for professionalism, incivility persists in t...
As there continue to be incidents of attorneys slapping opposing counsel at depositions, attorneys p...
In the last decade, most commentators assume that lawyers’ behavior is now diving to new lows, notwi...
Many law students come to law school after being indoctrinated by television and movies, believing t...
Historically, the concept of civility has been bound up with undemocratic notions of hierarchy and d...
The need to reclaim civility in the practice of law has become a rallying cry in the profession. L...
The Canadian rules of professional conduct constrain lawyers’ speech. Among other things, the rules ...
Civility codes have blossomed in the wake of rising concerns about incivility in politics, the workp...
This article is about lawyers and professional behaviour in litigation. Its basic argument is that t...
In the early twentieth century many legal professionals damned the law of contributory negligence as...
The adversary system\u27s pressures can strain the tone and tenor of a lawyer\u27s oral speech, but ...
Canadian legal ethics has paid little attention to how the rules of professional conduct for lawyers...
Discusses the role of judges when cases of civil disobedience are brought before the court
The legal profession has never been much loved. From Plato through Charles Dickens to Tom Wolfe, lit...
Recent discussion of legal ethics in Canada has focused on the importance of civility as a fundame...
Despite the rise of voluntary civility codes and calls for professionalism, incivility persists in t...
As there continue to be incidents of attorneys slapping opposing counsel at depositions, attorneys p...
In the last decade, most commentators assume that lawyers’ behavior is now diving to new lows, notwi...
Many law students come to law school after being indoctrinated by television and movies, believing t...
Historically, the concept of civility has been bound up with undemocratic notions of hierarchy and d...
The need to reclaim civility in the practice of law has become a rallying cry in the profession. L...
The Canadian rules of professional conduct constrain lawyers’ speech. Among other things, the rules ...
Civility codes have blossomed in the wake of rising concerns about incivility in politics, the workp...
This article is about lawyers and professional behaviour in litigation. Its basic argument is that t...
In the early twentieth century many legal professionals damned the law of contributory negligence as...
The adversary system\u27s pressures can strain the tone and tenor of a lawyer\u27s oral speech, but ...
Canadian legal ethics has paid little attention to how the rules of professional conduct for lawyers...
Discusses the role of judges when cases of civil disobedience are brought before the court
The legal profession has never been much loved. From Plato through Charles Dickens to Tom Wolfe, lit...