In 1905 Louis D. Brandeis delivered a talk entitled The Opportunity in the Law to the Harvard Ethical Society.\u27 It was delivered as a pep talk, what Harvard Law Professor Duncan Kennedy, seventy-six years later, would refer to as the old address to the troops. Brandeis hoped to rally law students to his vision of the moral possibilities of legal practice-specifically, the elite corporate legal practice into which Brandeis could assume his audience would enter. Brandeis was concerned that elite lawyers were becoming thralls of robber-baron capitalists, that they were ignoring the possibilities of law practice as a kind of public service and redefining the ethics of their profession to encompass little more than the principle of unadulte...
This article focuses on three current professionalism challenges in the U.S. legal profession: (i) t...
Law schools today have greatly improved over the past forty years. The question is if they have impr...
The simplification and socialization of law is frustrated by the stand-alone JD which accommodates s...
The law practice of Louis Brandeis serves as an appropriate vehicle for examining both the history o...
The need for multidisciplinary approaches to legal services has given rise to increasingly creative ...
“The life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience,” wrote Oliver Wendell Holmes in 188...
The Article explains how the Professionalism Paradigm distinguishes between self-interested business...
When legal ethics developed as an academic discipline in the mid-1970s, its theoretical roots were i...
Recent calls to reform legal education have culminated in the 2007 Carnegie Report, which is attract...
The professions of the 1980s are completely different from the situation in the 1930s. They are now ...
Dissatisfaction with lawyers is a chronic grievance, and inspires periodiccalls for reform. Neverthe...
For generations, the legal profession has assumed that only individual lawyers practice law. Ethical...
In this Article, Professor Hazard addresses the concerns many people have regarding the application ...
My friends, I am worried about the present health and the future well-being of a profession that has...
The legal profession has never been much loved. From Plato through Charles Dickens to Tom Wolfe, lit...
This article focuses on three current professionalism challenges in the U.S. legal profession: (i) t...
Law schools today have greatly improved over the past forty years. The question is if they have impr...
The simplification and socialization of law is frustrated by the stand-alone JD which accommodates s...
The law practice of Louis Brandeis serves as an appropriate vehicle for examining both the history o...
The need for multidisciplinary approaches to legal services has given rise to increasingly creative ...
“The life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience,” wrote Oliver Wendell Holmes in 188...
The Article explains how the Professionalism Paradigm distinguishes between self-interested business...
When legal ethics developed as an academic discipline in the mid-1970s, its theoretical roots were i...
Recent calls to reform legal education have culminated in the 2007 Carnegie Report, which is attract...
The professions of the 1980s are completely different from the situation in the 1930s. They are now ...
Dissatisfaction with lawyers is a chronic grievance, and inspires periodiccalls for reform. Neverthe...
For generations, the legal profession has assumed that only individual lawyers practice law. Ethical...
In this Article, Professor Hazard addresses the concerns many people have regarding the application ...
My friends, I am worried about the present health and the future well-being of a profession that has...
The legal profession has never been much loved. From Plato through Charles Dickens to Tom Wolfe, lit...
This article focuses on three current professionalism challenges in the U.S. legal profession: (i) t...
Law schools today have greatly improved over the past forty years. The question is if they have impr...
The simplification and socialization of law is frustrated by the stand-alone JD which accommodates s...