Five years ago, the term 'public interest law' had not been coined. Today a public interest bar exists and its role within the legal profession is significant enough to warrant an audit. Public interest law is the newest addition to those fields of law in which legal services are provided to those who are disadvantaged or whose interests are so diffuse that they are outside the normal marketplace for legal services. These areas of law have in common a need for some kind of subsidy - whether from the government private philanthropy, or the legal profession itself. Civil rights law, civil liberties law, and poverty law are now reasonably well understood areas of practice. The constituencies they represent have grown accustomed to seeking redr...
The public interest litigant is no longer a nascent phenomenon in American jurisprudence. Born of th...
The Legal Services Act 2007 brings about radical changes to both the regulatory structure of the leg...
There is a widely shared perception among lawyers, judges, and various public officials that governm...
At its best, the practice of public interest law is exciting, stimulating, and intensely rewarding. ...
This article presents some preliminary findings from empirical research on public discourse around p...
Despite annual exhortations to graduating law students to accept the responsibilities as well as the...
The public interest law movement is at the end of its first generation—part of a broader changing of...
The public interest is an oft-used elusive concept that often emerges from the adversarial system. T...
Despite annual exhortations to graduating law students to acceptthe responsibilities as well as the ...
In the American struggle for social justice, public interest litigation has played an indisputably i...
We of the law and we who administer the law are challenged today more acutely than ever before. Many...
Financial and legal constraints on nonprofit public interest organizations have focused attention on...
This Article scrutinizes the transformation of the legal profession from lawyers as public citizens ...
This chapter considers the relationship between private practice and the public good through the len...
This essay details what it means to be a public interest lawyer, as well as the challenges that face...
The public interest litigant is no longer a nascent phenomenon in American jurisprudence. Born of th...
The Legal Services Act 2007 brings about radical changes to both the regulatory structure of the leg...
There is a widely shared perception among lawyers, judges, and various public officials that governm...
At its best, the practice of public interest law is exciting, stimulating, and intensely rewarding. ...
This article presents some preliminary findings from empirical research on public discourse around p...
Despite annual exhortations to graduating law students to accept the responsibilities as well as the...
The public interest law movement is at the end of its first generation—part of a broader changing of...
The public interest is an oft-used elusive concept that often emerges from the adversarial system. T...
Despite annual exhortations to graduating law students to acceptthe responsibilities as well as the ...
In the American struggle for social justice, public interest litigation has played an indisputably i...
We of the law and we who administer the law are challenged today more acutely than ever before. Many...
Financial and legal constraints on nonprofit public interest organizations have focused attention on...
This Article scrutinizes the transformation of the legal profession from lawyers as public citizens ...
This chapter considers the relationship between private practice and the public good through the len...
This essay details what it means to be a public interest lawyer, as well as the challenges that face...
The public interest litigant is no longer a nascent phenomenon in American jurisprudence. Born of th...
The Legal Services Act 2007 brings about radical changes to both the regulatory structure of the leg...
There is a widely shared perception among lawyers, judges, and various public officials that governm...