This volume includes papers from the first annual Arthur Liman Colloquium, The Future of Legal Services, held at Yale Law School in the spring of 1998. There, we learned that half of the federally funded legal services offices no longer receive free of charge the national publication The Clearinghouse Review and that many staff attorneys do not have computer links to the Internet and other electronic sources. We thus are pleased to provide this collection of essays, written by lawyers (both pub lie and private), academics (both students and faculty), judges (both state and federal), and program administrators, all concerned about the system of justice for and the provision of legal services to people unable to pay attorneys directly
Opening Remarks to The Future of Legal Services: Legal and Ethical Implications of the LSC Restrict...
President\u27s Column, at 1. President Proposes the Elimination of Legal Services for the Poor, at 2...
Change, it is said, is the only constant. Whilst it cannot be avoided, the worlds of legal education...
Since its inception, the national legal services program has faced serious political opposition and ...
Taken together, the first annual Arthur Liman Symposium at the Yale Law School and the twenty-ninth ...
Three years have passed since the Congress of 1996 imposed comprehensive restrictions on the Legal S...
In no country of the world are lawyers so important or so influential as they are in America. Lawyer...
For over one hundred years, some of our country\u27s most dedicatedlawyers have struggled to provide...
This article seeks to address issues of lawyering under Legal Services Corporation (LSC) restriction...
The following reflections on the future of legal services were part of an online symposium on Prawfs...
You have asked me to summarize in under ten minutes the entire history of civil legal aid and civil ...
Discussing the role of the law library in legal education is necessary and essential, both because o...
•A Fresh Start for Career Services •LSSS Passes New Funding Policy •Law School Hires Five New Facult...
Preface to a collection of papers delivered at a conference on Academic Freedom and Legal Education,...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
Opening Remarks to The Future of Legal Services: Legal and Ethical Implications of the LSC Restrict...
President\u27s Column, at 1. President Proposes the Elimination of Legal Services for the Poor, at 2...
Change, it is said, is the only constant. Whilst it cannot be avoided, the worlds of legal education...
Since its inception, the national legal services program has faced serious political opposition and ...
Taken together, the first annual Arthur Liman Symposium at the Yale Law School and the twenty-ninth ...
Three years have passed since the Congress of 1996 imposed comprehensive restrictions on the Legal S...
In no country of the world are lawyers so important or so influential as they are in America. Lawyer...
For over one hundred years, some of our country\u27s most dedicatedlawyers have struggled to provide...
This article seeks to address issues of lawyering under Legal Services Corporation (LSC) restriction...
The following reflections on the future of legal services were part of an online symposium on Prawfs...
You have asked me to summarize in under ten minutes the entire history of civil legal aid and civil ...
Discussing the role of the law library in legal education is necessary and essential, both because o...
•A Fresh Start for Career Services •LSSS Passes New Funding Policy •Law School Hires Five New Facult...
Preface to a collection of papers delivered at a conference on Academic Freedom and Legal Education,...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
Opening Remarks to The Future of Legal Services: Legal and Ethical Implications of the LSC Restrict...
President\u27s Column, at 1. President Proposes the Elimination of Legal Services for the Poor, at 2...
Change, it is said, is the only constant. Whilst it cannot be avoided, the worlds of legal education...