What would a licensing regime designed around client protection look like? This Article proposes that it would include a narrower but more active judicial role. A one-size-fits-all exam would no longer control entry into the profession. The state judiciary would not be the gatekeeper for the entire legal profession; instead, its licensing role would focus on those attorneys who represent individual clients in court and those who manage client funds. But for this subset of lawyers, state judges should take a larger and more active role in overseeing the transition from student to advocate and should require greater practice readiness that goes beyond mere entry-level minimum competence
Scholars and critics have for decades advocated change in the professional regulation of legal servi...
This Article proposes a Rule concerning the admission to practice law in federal district courts and...
This Article proposes that the MDP Commission consider separately and independently its interests in...
Existing explanation of lawyer licensing focusing on the need to ensure lawyer quality are unconvinc...
Approximately 1.33 million lawyers hold active licenses in the United States. The U.S. Bureau of La...
For an attorney, admission to a state bar typically depends on passing an exam focused on the laws o...
Imagine that someone asks you how legal services are regulated in the United States. You might answe...
This article explores a key question for the future of the legal profession: does a paradigm in whic...
Legislators who are also practicing attorneys often face a conflict between their duty to further th...
In the past fifty years, one has heard debates about whether law is a business, a profession, or bot...
This Article focuses on those who regulate U.S. laywers. The Article argues that the lawyers who hea...
In this Article, we describe in detail the current problems with the regulation of lawyer mobility i...
The idea for establishing a Lawyers Justice Corps emerged out of efforts to solve a problem: how to ...
Technology is changing the way we do business. It has made cross-border trade in goods and services ...
The general decline in juris doctor (“J.D.”) law school applicants and enrollment over the last deca...
Scholars and critics have for decades advocated change in the professional regulation of legal servi...
This Article proposes a Rule concerning the admission to practice law in federal district courts and...
This Article proposes that the MDP Commission consider separately and independently its interests in...
Existing explanation of lawyer licensing focusing on the need to ensure lawyer quality are unconvinc...
Approximately 1.33 million lawyers hold active licenses in the United States. The U.S. Bureau of La...
For an attorney, admission to a state bar typically depends on passing an exam focused on the laws o...
Imagine that someone asks you how legal services are regulated in the United States. You might answe...
This article explores a key question for the future of the legal profession: does a paradigm in whic...
Legislators who are also practicing attorneys often face a conflict between their duty to further th...
In the past fifty years, one has heard debates about whether law is a business, a profession, or bot...
This Article focuses on those who regulate U.S. laywers. The Article argues that the lawyers who hea...
In this Article, we describe in detail the current problems with the regulation of lawyer mobility i...
The idea for establishing a Lawyers Justice Corps emerged out of efforts to solve a problem: how to ...
Technology is changing the way we do business. It has made cross-border trade in goods and services ...
The general decline in juris doctor (“J.D.”) law school applicants and enrollment over the last deca...
Scholars and critics have for decades advocated change in the professional regulation of legal servi...
This Article proposes a Rule concerning the admission to practice law in federal district courts and...
This Article proposes that the MDP Commission consider separately and independently its interests in...