In the literature of legal ethics, relatively little is said about the psychic turmoil that lawyers face while anticipating or defending a grievance, malpractice claim, or criminal charge. Even less is said about how lawyers who are found guilty of violating professional standards should go about rebuilding their reputations and personal lives after such proceedings have run their course, often with embarrassing results having been made public. Against this bleak backdrop, a dazzlingly introspective and hopeful book about lawyers and their mistakes-and about their suffering and possible moral growth-has been published
Several years ago, when I lived in Indiana, I got a grant to write a book about lawyers. The newspap...
Legal academics have long struggled to define the appropriate role a lawyer\u27s moral judgment ough...
Educating Lawyers, a new book from the Carnegie Foundation, analyzes our modern system of legal educ...
In the literature of legal ethics, relatively little is said about the psychic turmoil that lawyers ...
Vincent R. Johnson, professor at St. Mary\u27s University School of Law in San Antonio, Texas, revie...
Review of Lawyers in the Dock: Learning from Attorney Disciplinary Proceedings, by Richard Abe
Complaints about lawyers’ ethics are commonplace. While it is surely the case that some attorneys de...
This is an excerpt from How Lawyer’s Lose Their Way: A Profession Fails Its Creative Minds. Profess...
Michael Ariens’ new book, The Lawyer’s Conscience: A History of American Lawyer Ethics, is a monumen...
The law is the cornerstone of our society, one of the pillars of civilization, the very “witness … o...
The title of Daniel Markovits\u27s book, A Modern Legal Ethics, gives the impression that it is a co...
Dissatisfaction with lawyers is a chronic grievance, and inspires periodiccalls for reform. Neverthe...
In Professionalizing Moral Deference, Michael Hatfield argues that the way we form lawyers “begins w...
In recent years, there have been many public and private, formal and informal complaints about the b...
Recent efforts to hold lawyers accountable for their actions-including lawyers who sought to overtur...
Several years ago, when I lived in Indiana, I got a grant to write a book about lawyers. The newspap...
Legal academics have long struggled to define the appropriate role a lawyer\u27s moral judgment ough...
Educating Lawyers, a new book from the Carnegie Foundation, analyzes our modern system of legal educ...
In the literature of legal ethics, relatively little is said about the psychic turmoil that lawyers ...
Vincent R. Johnson, professor at St. Mary\u27s University School of Law in San Antonio, Texas, revie...
Review of Lawyers in the Dock: Learning from Attorney Disciplinary Proceedings, by Richard Abe
Complaints about lawyers’ ethics are commonplace. While it is surely the case that some attorneys de...
This is an excerpt from How Lawyer’s Lose Their Way: A Profession Fails Its Creative Minds. Profess...
Michael Ariens’ new book, The Lawyer’s Conscience: A History of American Lawyer Ethics, is a monumen...
The law is the cornerstone of our society, one of the pillars of civilization, the very “witness … o...
The title of Daniel Markovits\u27s book, A Modern Legal Ethics, gives the impression that it is a co...
Dissatisfaction with lawyers is a chronic grievance, and inspires periodiccalls for reform. Neverthe...
In Professionalizing Moral Deference, Michael Hatfield argues that the way we form lawyers “begins w...
In recent years, there have been many public and private, formal and informal complaints about the b...
Recent efforts to hold lawyers accountable for their actions-including lawyers who sought to overtur...
Several years ago, when I lived in Indiana, I got a grant to write a book about lawyers. The newspap...
Legal academics have long struggled to define the appropriate role a lawyer\u27s moral judgment ough...
Educating Lawyers, a new book from the Carnegie Foundation, analyzes our modern system of legal educ...