Professor Levine addresses the question of whether the practice of law a business or a profession and looks at sources where practitioners might draw inspiration for ethical behaviors. He examines two works: a 1916 book by Julius Henry Cohen - The Law: Business or Profession?; and a tale by Chasidic master Rabbi Nachman of Breslov. Both works tell the story of two sons from two different fathers with different ethical natures that manifest in their different choices of and approaches to their careers. Professor Levine uses these two parables to suggest that a more inclusive question than those posed above: whether the true measure of an individual\u27s societal value is more a function of personal character than it is of professional status...
Traditional notions and rules of professionalism in the legal profession have been premised on parti...
Whereas legal ethics define what every lawyer must do, legal professionalism takes on the more diffi...
The question I propose to address while I am with you is this: Is there a special morality for profe...
Professor Levine addresses the question of whether the practice of law a business or a profession an...
This article addresses one of the central contemporary debates over the nature of the practice of la...
This Essay is based on introductory remarks Levine delivered at the inaugural conference of the Pepp...
Legal ethics, professional responsibility, and professionalism are timely topics as lawyers contin...
The legal profession has never been much loved. From Plato through Charles Dickens to Tom Wolfe, lit...
The 1908 Canons of Professional Ethics directed a lawyer to obey his own conscience. \u27 Lawyers r...
In his rich meditation on the ethical condition of the contemporary American bar, Daniel Markovits c...
If one were to do a book on the conscience of a lawyer in this day andage, one might begin by examin...
The character of the “gentlemen” has served as a basis for ethics in professionalism. The purpose of...
In his 1916 work The Law: Business or Profession?, Julius Henry Cohen describes an American legal sy...
This Article argues that the cultural images of lawyering provide opportunities for teaching profess...
This Essay is based on introductory remarks Levine delivered at the inaugural conference of the Pepp...
Traditional notions and rules of professionalism in the legal profession have been premised on parti...
Whereas legal ethics define what every lawyer must do, legal professionalism takes on the more diffi...
The question I propose to address while I am with you is this: Is there a special morality for profe...
Professor Levine addresses the question of whether the practice of law a business or a profession an...
This article addresses one of the central contemporary debates over the nature of the practice of la...
This Essay is based on introductory remarks Levine delivered at the inaugural conference of the Pepp...
Legal ethics, professional responsibility, and professionalism are timely topics as lawyers contin...
The legal profession has never been much loved. From Plato through Charles Dickens to Tom Wolfe, lit...
The 1908 Canons of Professional Ethics directed a lawyer to obey his own conscience. \u27 Lawyers r...
In his rich meditation on the ethical condition of the contemporary American bar, Daniel Markovits c...
If one were to do a book on the conscience of a lawyer in this day andage, one might begin by examin...
The character of the “gentlemen” has served as a basis for ethics in professionalism. The purpose of...
In his 1916 work The Law: Business or Profession?, Julius Henry Cohen describes an American legal sy...
This Article argues that the cultural images of lawyering provide opportunities for teaching profess...
This Essay is based on introductory remarks Levine delivered at the inaugural conference of the Pepp...
Traditional notions and rules of professionalism in the legal profession have been premised on parti...
Whereas legal ethics define what every lawyer must do, legal professionalism takes on the more diffi...
The question I propose to address while I am with you is this: Is there a special morality for profe...