Legal practise is shaped by its social, political and economic environment. Canada\u27s new economy of decreasing state regulation, globalization, computerization and changes in information technology, and the shift from manufacturing to the service sector has grave - largely negative - implications for the future of law and lawyers. Moreover, the profession is fragmented and stratified. It comprises multiple constituencies - solo practitioners, large corporate firms and specialists - with differing demographies and professional roles, which are implicated in varying degrees in the new economy . As a result, they experience the restructuring of professional knowledge, governance, ethics and culture in ways so diverse as to put in questio...
Globalization and technology have changed the practice of law in dramatic ways. This is true not onl...
The North American legal profession has traditionally excluded marginalized social groups via formal...
Government lawyers are significant actors in the Canadian legal profession, yet they are largely ign...
Legal practise is shaped by its social, political and economic environment. Canada\u27s new economy...
The diverse, dynamic, and inchoate developments we call the new economy are a catalyst for responsiv...
Social and economic societal values are incorporated into the Canadian legal system, and widespread ...
In common law Northern Europe and in Australasia, a wave of reform has been transforming legal servi...
During the nineteen sixties, it was provincial governments rather than lawyers or their professional...
The Canadian legal profession emerged from the confluence of two distinct traditions: the American a...
The question of whether Canadian lawyers ought to be trusted to govern themselves has been repeatedl...
The article examines two interrelated issues attracting attention from the legal academy, the profes...
This article analyzes the transformation in the scholarship of legal ethics that has occurred in Can...
In this essay I assess and reflect on the past and future of the Canadian literature on legal ethics...
External changes - in demography and economy, in the domestic and global organization of power - are...
This collection of essays edited by Carol Wilton\u27 chronicles the changing character of Canadian l...
Globalization and technology have changed the practice of law in dramatic ways. This is true not onl...
The North American legal profession has traditionally excluded marginalized social groups via formal...
Government lawyers are significant actors in the Canadian legal profession, yet they are largely ign...
Legal practise is shaped by its social, political and economic environment. Canada\u27s new economy...
The diverse, dynamic, and inchoate developments we call the new economy are a catalyst for responsiv...
Social and economic societal values are incorporated into the Canadian legal system, and widespread ...
In common law Northern Europe and in Australasia, a wave of reform has been transforming legal servi...
During the nineteen sixties, it was provincial governments rather than lawyers or their professional...
The Canadian legal profession emerged from the confluence of two distinct traditions: the American a...
The question of whether Canadian lawyers ought to be trusted to govern themselves has been repeatedl...
The article examines two interrelated issues attracting attention from the legal academy, the profes...
This article analyzes the transformation in the scholarship of legal ethics that has occurred in Can...
In this essay I assess and reflect on the past and future of the Canadian literature on legal ethics...
External changes - in demography and economy, in the domestic and global organization of power - are...
This collection of essays edited by Carol Wilton\u27 chronicles the changing character of Canadian l...
Globalization and technology have changed the practice of law in dramatic ways. This is true not onl...
The North American legal profession has traditionally excluded marginalized social groups via formal...
Government lawyers are significant actors in the Canadian legal profession, yet they are largely ign...