This article proposes two controversial assertions about the writing of many lawyers and judges today and offers a central theme for improving that writing. These bold propositions are offered in an effort to awaken and perhaps inspire the legions of overworked, harried legal scriveners inhabiting our legal community to adopt a new methodology of writing. Too many legal writers today are forced by the various (nefarious) circumstances of their work to crank out reams of hastily conceived and poorly edited text. The time has arrived for us to admit to this unacceptable state of affairs and to declare independence from unprofessional work environments and habits
The growing attention to the quality of legal prose is laudable. Yet more fundamental inquiry into l...
This article concerns the value of teaching employed law students about the potency of “impactful le...
The adversary system\u27s pressures can strain the tone and tenor of a lawyer\u27s oral speech, but ...
This article shows why lawyers must improve their writing skills beyond law school, throughout their...
Virtually all legal writing is atrocious! This is true about (a) statutes and administrative regulat...
Characterizing attorneys as professional writers, in the literary sense, who just happen to work in ...
Criticism of legal writing has come with increasing frequency and stridency in recent years from law...
This article explores the concept of lawyers’ professional independence in the literature of the U...
This article begins with the premise that most law students will become professional writers: that i...
The attached article responds to a 2011 article by John Lynch, published in the Journal of Legal Edu...
There is a problem of bad legal writing – one that is far more serious than we recognize or are will...
Despite some imperfections across disciplines, advice from well-known fiction and non-fiction writer...
This essay proceeds in four parts. It first supports the descriptive claim that many in the legal wr...
Five years ago, I went to lunch with a colleague. I was teaching a legal writing course to 1L studen...
Lawyer\u27s commonly write as the client\u27s representative, but this article explores three opport...
The growing attention to the quality of legal prose is laudable. Yet more fundamental inquiry into l...
This article concerns the value of teaching employed law students about the potency of “impactful le...
The adversary system\u27s pressures can strain the tone and tenor of a lawyer\u27s oral speech, but ...
This article shows why lawyers must improve their writing skills beyond law school, throughout their...
Virtually all legal writing is atrocious! This is true about (a) statutes and administrative regulat...
Characterizing attorneys as professional writers, in the literary sense, who just happen to work in ...
Criticism of legal writing has come with increasing frequency and stridency in recent years from law...
This article explores the concept of lawyers’ professional independence in the literature of the U...
This article begins with the premise that most law students will become professional writers: that i...
The attached article responds to a 2011 article by John Lynch, published in the Journal of Legal Edu...
There is a problem of bad legal writing – one that is far more serious than we recognize or are will...
Despite some imperfections across disciplines, advice from well-known fiction and non-fiction writer...
This essay proceeds in four parts. It first supports the descriptive claim that many in the legal wr...
Five years ago, I went to lunch with a colleague. I was teaching a legal writing course to 1L studen...
Lawyer\u27s commonly write as the client\u27s representative, but this article explores three opport...
The growing attention to the quality of legal prose is laudable. Yet more fundamental inquiry into l...
This article concerns the value of teaching employed law students about the potency of “impactful le...
The adversary system\u27s pressures can strain the tone and tenor of a lawyer\u27s oral speech, but ...