Address delivered to the Massachusetts Trial Lawyers Association concerning the present and future status of lawyers and the legal profession in Massachusetts in 1958
A RLJ discussion paper on the future of the law profession from the perspective of a Rhodesian lawy...
Lawyers in the United States work in public service, private counseling, and dispute resolution, but...
Legal education is taking on new meaning. Law schools areentering upon a new development. The classi...
Address delivered to the Massachusetts Trial Lawyers Association concerning the present and future s...
This Article is a follow-up to a recent symposium on the future of law practice, the proceedings of ...
What today\u27s law students do as lawyers will be profoundly affected by changes their clients expe...
For this Law School Centennial issue of the Journal, I am undertaking to offer, first, a retrospecti...
This piece introduces the Pepperdine Law Review symposium issue for Volume 40, publishing articles d...
Publication of the Student Bar Association of the Boston College Law School. This issue includes sev...
This Note explores the relationship between legal education and the legal profession, and what can b...
As a historical matter, the legal profession obstinately resists change. Its ponderous, backward-lo...
• The next 50 years• Recent developments in bar admissions: Should trial attorneys be certified?http...
The premier strength of legal education resides in its dual identity as an academic department of a ...
I’m going to present three quite different views of what law schools ought to be and ought to do. Th...
Many books and articles in the last few years describe a profession in crisis with no shortage of ...
A RLJ discussion paper on the future of the law profession from the perspective of a Rhodesian lawy...
Lawyers in the United States work in public service, private counseling, and dispute resolution, but...
Legal education is taking on new meaning. Law schools areentering upon a new development. The classi...
Address delivered to the Massachusetts Trial Lawyers Association concerning the present and future s...
This Article is a follow-up to a recent symposium on the future of law practice, the proceedings of ...
What today\u27s law students do as lawyers will be profoundly affected by changes their clients expe...
For this Law School Centennial issue of the Journal, I am undertaking to offer, first, a retrospecti...
This piece introduces the Pepperdine Law Review symposium issue for Volume 40, publishing articles d...
Publication of the Student Bar Association of the Boston College Law School. This issue includes sev...
This Note explores the relationship between legal education and the legal profession, and what can b...
As a historical matter, the legal profession obstinately resists change. Its ponderous, backward-lo...
• The next 50 years• Recent developments in bar admissions: Should trial attorneys be certified?http...
The premier strength of legal education resides in its dual identity as an academic department of a ...
I’m going to present three quite different views of what law schools ought to be and ought to do. Th...
Many books and articles in the last few years describe a profession in crisis with no shortage of ...
A RLJ discussion paper on the future of the law profession from the perspective of a Rhodesian lawy...
Lawyers in the United States work in public service, private counseling, and dispute resolution, but...
Legal education is taking on new meaning. Law schools areentering upon a new development. The classi...