This report is conceived with the need (or lack thereof) for more uniform admission requirements and disciplinary processes in the federal courts. Basically, it surveys the background and literature and considers the issues and proposals relating to bar admissions and discipline in the federal courts. It also contains a Study Draft of Rules Governing Admissions and Discipline in Federal District Courts (Appendix A). The Study Draft proposals are designed to assure that there are rules explicitly governing the material issues considered in the report. At the same time, the Study Draft would leave to the local courts sufficient flexibility to allow local expression, thus minimizing the upset resulting from the adoption of the generally applic...
In most of the states, judges of the appellate courts and of the trial courts of general jurisdictio...
The Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1982 abolished the United States Court of Claims and the Unite...
The Supreme People’s Court classifies admission into two types— complete admission and restrictive ...
This Article proposes a Rule concerning the admission to practice law in federal district courts and...
At present, the rules of professional conduct applied in federal judicial proceedings vary from dist...
In conformity with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, each district court may specify its own spe...
The proposed new admission rules for the federal district courts in the Second Circuit will have ser...
Debra Curtis, Attorney Discipline Nationwide: A Comparative Analysis of Process and Statistics, 35 J...
Judicial Conference of the United States to Consider Standards for Admission to Practice in the Fede...
The need for improvement in the quality of practice of law has resulted in a recent tendency to look...
A review of Florida Bar discipline from documents available to the public from 1988-2002
In 1938, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were adopted. Their adoption represented a triumph of ...
In 2008, the Judicial Conference of the United States – the administrative policy-making body of the...
The problem is often decried: out-of-control attorneys, opportunists, cowboys, self-dealers, and ove...
The United States District Court for the District of Arizona has generally not contributed to a sign...
In most of the states, judges of the appellate courts and of the trial courts of general jurisdictio...
The Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1982 abolished the United States Court of Claims and the Unite...
The Supreme People’s Court classifies admission into two types— complete admission and restrictive ...
This Article proposes a Rule concerning the admission to practice law in federal district courts and...
At present, the rules of professional conduct applied in federal judicial proceedings vary from dist...
In conformity with the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, each district court may specify its own spe...
The proposed new admission rules for the federal district courts in the Second Circuit will have ser...
Debra Curtis, Attorney Discipline Nationwide: A Comparative Analysis of Process and Statistics, 35 J...
Judicial Conference of the United States to Consider Standards for Admission to Practice in the Fede...
The need for improvement in the quality of practice of law has resulted in a recent tendency to look...
A review of Florida Bar discipline from documents available to the public from 1988-2002
In 1938, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were adopted. Their adoption represented a triumph of ...
In 2008, the Judicial Conference of the United States – the administrative policy-making body of the...
The problem is often decried: out-of-control attorneys, opportunists, cowboys, self-dealers, and ove...
The United States District Court for the District of Arizona has generally not contributed to a sign...
In most of the states, judges of the appellate courts and of the trial courts of general jurisdictio...
The Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1982 abolished the United States Court of Claims and the Unite...
The Supreme People’s Court classifies admission into two types— complete admission and restrictive ...