The rapidly expanding Chinese legal profession provides an extraordinary opportunity for the U.S. legal profession to test U.S. assumptions about legal ethics. This essay examines challenges facing Chinese legal education and the Chinese legal profession as it develops norms of legal ethics. This essay examines this process from the law school and law student’s perspective about legal ethics, and then briefly explores the effort to create norms of attorney conduct from a top-down perspective. Both a bottom-up and top-down view show the tremendous challenges facing the emerging Chinese legal culture in building a coherent model of lawyering that can serve as the foundation for a system of legal ethics
In this essay I would like to consider the nature of the role of lawyers from the point of view of b...
China and Japan are the two largest economies in Asia, and both countries are similar in their adopt...
Spaeth et al assert that the only reason to teach legal ethics, or professional responsibility, is t...
This essay starts with two simple questions: Why do law schools in China have so little discussion o...
The author summarizes his discussions with Chinese law professors regarding the issues that separate...
When the first lawyers of the modern Chinese legal regime began work in 1980, the role they played i...
The number of Chinese lawyers and law schools is burgeoning as China\u27s legal system undergoes sig...
On paper the state-run lawyer disciplinary system in China serves multiple interests: client protect...
Ethical training for law students is commonly known as legal ethics education. In the past three dec...
Session 6D - Legal Ethics in China and JapanJudicial ethics has become a burning issue in the People...
Legal ethics, professional responsibility, and professionalism are timely topics as lawyers contin...
The author summarizes his discussions with Chinese law professors regarding the issues that separat...
Examining legal ethics within the framework of modern practice, this book identifies two important e...
These remarks elaborate on legal ethics , more properly understood as professional rules of conduc...
Legal education is a fundamental connection in the Chinese general set of laws, especially when Chin...
In this essay I would like to consider the nature of the role of lawyers from the point of view of b...
China and Japan are the two largest economies in Asia, and both countries are similar in their adopt...
Spaeth et al assert that the only reason to teach legal ethics, or professional responsibility, is t...
This essay starts with two simple questions: Why do law schools in China have so little discussion o...
The author summarizes his discussions with Chinese law professors regarding the issues that separate...
When the first lawyers of the modern Chinese legal regime began work in 1980, the role they played i...
The number of Chinese lawyers and law schools is burgeoning as China\u27s legal system undergoes sig...
On paper the state-run lawyer disciplinary system in China serves multiple interests: client protect...
Ethical training for law students is commonly known as legal ethics education. In the past three dec...
Session 6D - Legal Ethics in China and JapanJudicial ethics has become a burning issue in the People...
Legal ethics, professional responsibility, and professionalism are timely topics as lawyers contin...
The author summarizes his discussions with Chinese law professors regarding the issues that separat...
Examining legal ethics within the framework of modern practice, this book identifies two important e...
These remarks elaborate on legal ethics , more properly understood as professional rules of conduc...
Legal education is a fundamental connection in the Chinese general set of laws, especially when Chin...
In this essay I would like to consider the nature of the role of lawyers from the point of view of b...
China and Japan are the two largest economies in Asia, and both countries are similar in their adopt...
Spaeth et al assert that the only reason to teach legal ethics, or professional responsibility, is t...