History is replete with instances where a community\u27s duly enacted laws have offended the moral convictions of at least some of its citizens. This comment examines the conscientious undertaking of civil disobedience as a means of persuading those in power that such laws are repugnant to commonly shared or enlightened moral standards. An attorney sympathetic to a client who engages in such an undertaking must be wary of possible disciplinary sanctions that may be imposed against him: the Code of Professional Responsibility specifically prohibits attorneys from counseling a client with respect to conduct the lawyer knows to be illegal, and a civilly disobedient act necessarily involves behavior contrary to law. The author, having examined ...
Civil litigators are increasingly governed by a body of law that is similar, but not identical, to e...
Civil disobedience is an action that is intended to appeal to the public, to show that they have vio...
Professor Hazard discusses the dimensions of the lawyer conduct prohibited by DR 7-102(A)(7) of the ...
The purpose of this essay is to propose and justify a theory of the proper role of the lawyer faced ...
Edmund Burke once noted that the rebelliousness of colonial America was largely a consequence of the...
This Comment first explores reasons for the rare application of fee disgorgement as a disciplinary m...
The legal profession has long promulgated rules in an effort to guide attorneys toward appropriate e...
This is a reprint from the Washington and Lee Law Review , Volume XXIII, No. 2 (Fall 1966.
This article is based on a speech delivered by Judge Frank M.Johnson, Jr. to the faculty and student...
Discussions of legal ethics generally assume that lawyers should deliberate straightforwardly on the...
Published as Chapter 6 in The Paradox of Professionalism: Lawyers and the Possibility of Justice, Sc...
Discusses the role of judges when cases of civil disobedience are brought before the court
This dissertation examines the moral character of civil disobedience. The discussion begins with a c...
Historically, the concept of civility has been bound up with undemocratic notions of hierarchy and d...
Deliberate acts of violence in purported support of a social cause doubtlessly will not be tolerated...
Civil litigators are increasingly governed by a body of law that is similar, but not identical, to e...
Civil disobedience is an action that is intended to appeal to the public, to show that they have vio...
Professor Hazard discusses the dimensions of the lawyer conduct prohibited by DR 7-102(A)(7) of the ...
The purpose of this essay is to propose and justify a theory of the proper role of the lawyer faced ...
Edmund Burke once noted that the rebelliousness of colonial America was largely a consequence of the...
This Comment first explores reasons for the rare application of fee disgorgement as a disciplinary m...
The legal profession has long promulgated rules in an effort to guide attorneys toward appropriate e...
This is a reprint from the Washington and Lee Law Review , Volume XXIII, No. 2 (Fall 1966.
This article is based on a speech delivered by Judge Frank M.Johnson, Jr. to the faculty and student...
Discussions of legal ethics generally assume that lawyers should deliberate straightforwardly on the...
Published as Chapter 6 in The Paradox of Professionalism: Lawyers and the Possibility of Justice, Sc...
Discusses the role of judges when cases of civil disobedience are brought before the court
This dissertation examines the moral character of civil disobedience. The discussion begins with a c...
Historically, the concept of civility has been bound up with undemocratic notions of hierarchy and d...
Deliberate acts of violence in purported support of a social cause doubtlessly will not be tolerated...
Civil litigators are increasingly governed by a body of law that is similar, but not identical, to e...
Civil disobedience is an action that is intended to appeal to the public, to show that they have vio...
Professor Hazard discusses the dimensions of the lawyer conduct prohibited by DR 7-102(A)(7) of the ...