This is an inquiry about the morality of lawyers and law practice. Some modern academic critiques hold law practice to be immoral or unjust as compared to the standard of “common morality” or of the sense of “justice” shared in the community. This Essay advances a different standard of reference, one that takes into account the pervasive conflicts within society and the limitations on the government’s ability to get at the truth. These limitations generate a role for lawyers as empowered figures who employ government authority as partisans and confidantes for their clients. That role is comparable to other roles that involve exercise of authority, particularly the roles of government officials and business managers
In thinking about the government\u27s proper role in promoting morals, it is helpful first to unders...
Can a good lawyer be a good person? The question troubles lawyers and law students alike. They are t...
The debate over whether it serves or undermines the interests of justice for lawyers to temper the z...
This is an inquiry about the morality of lawyers and law practice. Some modern academic critiques ho...
The question considered in the session was whether the concern of legal ethics is the morality of la...
This Essay is about the role of unwritten norms in the ethical decisionmaking of government lawyers....
Much recent academic discussion exaggerates the distance between plausible legal ethics and ordinary...
Discussions of legal ethics generally assume that lawyers should deliberate straightforwardly on the...
In this essay I would like to consider the nature of the role of lawyers from the point of view of b...
Much recent academic discussion exaggerates the distance between plausible legal ethics and ordinary...
When legal ethics developed as an academic discipline in the mid-1970s, its theoretical roots were i...
Criticism of the “politicization” of the role of federal government lawyers has been intense in rece...
In his rich meditation on the ethical condition of the contemporary American bar, Daniel Markovits c...
The dominant model of ethical lawyering views lawyers as zealous advocates, who do whatever possible...
In this project, I intend to examine the dynamic of the relationship between the lawyer and the clie...
In thinking about the government\u27s proper role in promoting morals, it is helpful first to unders...
Can a good lawyer be a good person? The question troubles lawyers and law students alike. They are t...
The debate over whether it serves or undermines the interests of justice for lawyers to temper the z...
This is an inquiry about the morality of lawyers and law practice. Some modern academic critiques ho...
The question considered in the session was whether the concern of legal ethics is the morality of la...
This Essay is about the role of unwritten norms in the ethical decisionmaking of government lawyers....
Much recent academic discussion exaggerates the distance between plausible legal ethics and ordinary...
Discussions of legal ethics generally assume that lawyers should deliberate straightforwardly on the...
In this essay I would like to consider the nature of the role of lawyers from the point of view of b...
Much recent academic discussion exaggerates the distance between plausible legal ethics and ordinary...
When legal ethics developed as an academic discipline in the mid-1970s, its theoretical roots were i...
Criticism of the “politicization” of the role of federal government lawyers has been intense in rece...
In his rich meditation on the ethical condition of the contemporary American bar, Daniel Markovits c...
The dominant model of ethical lawyering views lawyers as zealous advocates, who do whatever possible...
In this project, I intend to examine the dynamic of the relationship between the lawyer and the clie...
In thinking about the government\u27s proper role in promoting morals, it is helpful first to unders...
Can a good lawyer be a good person? The question troubles lawyers and law students alike. They are t...
The debate over whether it serves or undermines the interests of justice for lawyers to temper the z...