What\u27s wrong with us lawyers? Mainly, it is that the worst among us pose for our portrait, so that we are viewed as avaricious and egomaniacal, all flair and no substance, seeking and wielding power without having the strength of character to wield it well. Lost to the public is the portrait of most lawyers, the sorts of lawyers that I hope this University produces. They are quiet people who come to the law, and stay with it, because they know that the law\u27s power lets them help people make the best of a trying world
The increasing belief among many lawyers that life is comprised of fear and greed and money has al...
Lawyers are said to travel in packs, or at least pairs, and in the popular parlance are often compar...
Back in the mid-eighties, I offered a first year, second semester un-elective called American Lega...
What\u27s wrong with us lawyers? Mainly, it is that the worst among us pose for our portrait, so tha...
Lawyer-bashing in America has long been a national pastime, having somehow escaped the palliative of...
The misdeeds of the Watergate lawyers involve more than image tarnishing. A large number of the show...
Several years ago, when I lived in Indiana, I got a grant to write a book about lawyers. The newspap...
Are we over-lawyered? The answer that a lawyer must give is the kind of response that always exasper...
This essay explores the ambiguous position lawyers occupy in the popular mind in America by identify...
Lawyers in the United States work in public service, private counseling, and dispute resolution, but...
With so little honor associated with the law profession these days, one must wonder why any person a...
Dissatisfaction with lawyers is a chronic grievance, and inspires periodiccalls for reform. Neverthe...
Published as Chapter 6 in The Paradox of Professionalism: Lawyers and the Possibility of Justice, Sc...
Lawyers in U.S. culture are often presented in either an extremely positive or extremely negative li...
Some one once observed that the size of a man is measured by the size of the things that he will let...
The increasing belief among many lawyers that life is comprised of fear and greed and money has al...
Lawyers are said to travel in packs, or at least pairs, and in the popular parlance are often compar...
Back in the mid-eighties, I offered a first year, second semester un-elective called American Lega...
What\u27s wrong with us lawyers? Mainly, it is that the worst among us pose for our portrait, so tha...
Lawyer-bashing in America has long been a national pastime, having somehow escaped the palliative of...
The misdeeds of the Watergate lawyers involve more than image tarnishing. A large number of the show...
Several years ago, when I lived in Indiana, I got a grant to write a book about lawyers. The newspap...
Are we over-lawyered? The answer that a lawyer must give is the kind of response that always exasper...
This essay explores the ambiguous position lawyers occupy in the popular mind in America by identify...
Lawyers in the United States work in public service, private counseling, and dispute resolution, but...
With so little honor associated with the law profession these days, one must wonder why any person a...
Dissatisfaction with lawyers is a chronic grievance, and inspires periodiccalls for reform. Neverthe...
Published as Chapter 6 in The Paradox of Professionalism: Lawyers and the Possibility of Justice, Sc...
Lawyers in U.S. culture are often presented in either an extremely positive or extremely negative li...
Some one once observed that the size of a man is measured by the size of the things that he will let...
The increasing belief among many lawyers that life is comprised of fear and greed and money has al...
Lawyers are said to travel in packs, or at least pairs, and in the popular parlance are often compar...
Back in the mid-eighties, I offered a first year, second semester un-elective called American Lega...