A central and ongoing debate among legal ethics scholars addresses the moral positioning of adversarial advocacy. Most participants in this debate focus on the structure of our legal system and the constituent role of the lawyer-advocate. Many are highly critical, arguing that the core structure of adversarial advocacy is the root cause of many instances of lawyer misconduct. In this Article, we argue that these scholars’ focuses are misguided. Through reflection on Aristotle’s treatise, Rhetoric, we defend advocacy in our legal system’s litigation process as ethically positive and as pivotal to fair and effective dispute resolution. We recognize that advocacy can, and sometimes does, involve improper and unethical use of adversarial techni...
Legal ethics is largely concerned with questions of moral permissibility. Is a lawyer morally permit...
The question I address in this paper is whether it is morally wrong for a lawyer to represent a clie...
In The Practice of Justice, William Simon addresses a widely recognized dilemma -- the moral degrada...
A central and ongoing debate among legal ethics scholars addresses the moral positioning of adversar...
Conventional morality frowns at the ethics of advocacy. Public opinion disapproves of what it consid...
Two of the conversations benefitting most from Jack Sammons\u27s scholarship are conversations about...
Advocacy at its best is a form of reconciliation. It reconciles the advocate with those whose champi...
Professor Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr., has made significant contributions to the field of lawyer\u27s et...
Modem American lawyers impose on one another regulatory rules that speak to the old argument but hav...
This essay advances an account of the ordinary speech activity of advocating. The ethical principles...
Professor Goodwin makes a case for the normative complexity of advocacy. She makes this case in the ...
The John A. Sibley Lecture in Law delivered by Yale Law Professor Geoffrey Hazard at the University ...
This thesis is an inquiry into the ethical aspects of the advocate's function within the adversarial...
Professor Markovits has given us in A Modern Legal Ethics a profound, provocative, and closely argue...
Much ink has been spilled in recent years on the ethics and standards that should be applied to thir...
Legal ethics is largely concerned with questions of moral permissibility. Is a lawyer morally permit...
The question I address in this paper is whether it is morally wrong for a lawyer to represent a clie...
In The Practice of Justice, William Simon addresses a widely recognized dilemma -- the moral degrada...
A central and ongoing debate among legal ethics scholars addresses the moral positioning of adversar...
Conventional morality frowns at the ethics of advocacy. Public opinion disapproves of what it consid...
Two of the conversations benefitting most from Jack Sammons\u27s scholarship are conversations about...
Advocacy at its best is a form of reconciliation. It reconciles the advocate with those whose champi...
Professor Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr., has made significant contributions to the field of lawyer\u27s et...
Modem American lawyers impose on one another regulatory rules that speak to the old argument but hav...
This essay advances an account of the ordinary speech activity of advocating. The ethical principles...
Professor Goodwin makes a case for the normative complexity of advocacy. She makes this case in the ...
The John A. Sibley Lecture in Law delivered by Yale Law Professor Geoffrey Hazard at the University ...
This thesis is an inquiry into the ethical aspects of the advocate's function within the adversarial...
Professor Markovits has given us in A Modern Legal Ethics a profound, provocative, and closely argue...
Much ink has been spilled in recent years on the ethics and standards that should be applied to thir...
Legal ethics is largely concerned with questions of moral permissibility. Is a lawyer morally permit...
The question I address in this paper is whether it is morally wrong for a lawyer to represent a clie...
In The Practice of Justice, William Simon addresses a widely recognized dilemma -- the moral degrada...