In the last five years the organized bar in the United States—represented by the American Bar Association, which provided the leadership, and by the state bars, which have given staunch support to the ABA—has moved forward to two major and sweeping decisions for change and progress and appears well on the way to a third. The first to come to fruition was the Code of Professional Responsibility, the landmark reformulation of the ethical standards of the legal profession adopted by the ABA House of Delegates in 1969, and now in effect either as court-adopted rules or as rules adopted by the organized bar in forty-three states and the District of Columbia. The second movement now well under way is the new awareness on the part of the bar of th...
This article addresses the ABA as a source of pressure to encourage and foster professionalism educa...
In recent years, there have been many public and private, formal and informal complaints about the b...
Over the past few years, bar officials have increasingly called for a rekindling of lawyer profess...
In the last five years the organized bar in the United States—represented by the American Bar Associ...
In 1986, the American Bar Association\u27s House of Delegates endorsed a report which offered a Blu...
Our society depends to a large extent on lawyers to assure all citizens the protection and advantage...
When considering the professional responsibilities of American lawyers, two questions often arise: (...
When it comes to the subject of professionalism, there is a gap between the leaders of the organiz...
As the twentieth century draws to a close, the legal profession again immersed in a process of self-...
The article discusses the American Bar Association\u27s (ABA\u27s) Standing Committee on Professiona...
The bar is now generally aware that a revised set of Rules of Professional Conduct has been proposed...
Around the globe regulators are rethinking the scope of their mandates and responsibilities. They ar...
Inspired by Ted Schneyer’s future history of professional discipline and Bob Gordon’s description of...
The vast and sophisticated needs of the public cannot be met through a dependence on sheer voluntari...
This piece was originally commissioned by the American Bar Association Center for Professional Respo...
This article addresses the ABA as a source of pressure to encourage and foster professionalism educa...
In recent years, there have been many public and private, formal and informal complaints about the b...
Over the past few years, bar officials have increasingly called for a rekindling of lawyer profess...
In the last five years the organized bar in the United States—represented by the American Bar Associ...
In 1986, the American Bar Association\u27s House of Delegates endorsed a report which offered a Blu...
Our society depends to a large extent on lawyers to assure all citizens the protection and advantage...
When considering the professional responsibilities of American lawyers, two questions often arise: (...
When it comes to the subject of professionalism, there is a gap between the leaders of the organiz...
As the twentieth century draws to a close, the legal profession again immersed in a process of self-...
The article discusses the American Bar Association\u27s (ABA\u27s) Standing Committee on Professiona...
The bar is now generally aware that a revised set of Rules of Professional Conduct has been proposed...
Around the globe regulators are rethinking the scope of their mandates and responsibilities. They ar...
Inspired by Ted Schneyer’s future history of professional discipline and Bob Gordon’s description of...
The vast and sophisticated needs of the public cannot be met through a dependence on sheer voluntari...
This piece was originally commissioned by the American Bar Association Center for Professional Respo...
This article addresses the ABA as a source of pressure to encourage and foster professionalism educa...
In recent years, there have been many public and private, formal and informal complaints about the b...
Over the past few years, bar officials have increasingly called for a rekindling of lawyer profess...