This paper explores the significance of the changing nature of the good character requirement for law society admission in Canada. It posits that good character has shifted from a philosophical concept into a psychological concept, with evidence of past bad acts claimed to be relevant for whether an applicant represents a future risk to the public. This shifting conception of character has, however, been only partial, and the decision-making processes of Canadian law societies have not kept pace with it. Instead, the decision-making process defines character generally and generically, with only occasional emphasis on character as a relevant predictor of future behaviour. In addition, law societies only rarely employ psychological evidence i...
The subject of character is a major concern in psychology, a central concern in ethics, and an impor...
A comprehensive analysis of the bad character provisions in the Criminal Justice Act 2003 •Explores ...
In our law, the word character has no single, well defined, technical meaning. Sometimes it means ac...
This paper explores the significance of the changing nature of the good character requirement for la...
Every Canadian law society requires thatapplicants for bar admission be of good character The auth...
The problems of character evidence resolved by the new Federal Rules are problems that involve the...
“Character” is a difficult concept to define, as Chief Justice Montgomery discovered. It seems intui...
Almost 40 years ago, Deborah Rhode chronicled numerous problems with the legal profession’s characte...
For some time now the phenomenon known as psychological typing has been finding its way into the stu...
It is time to rethink character evidence. Long notorious as the most frequently litigated evidence i...
The issue of how "forensic psychology " is defined has taken on a new urgency in the conte...
Every state requires good moral character on the part of those applying for admission to practice la...
To work effectively with clients, witnesses, judges, mediators, arbitrators, experts, jurors, and ot...
This case note concerns the recent decision of the Court of Appeal in Hunter v R; Saruwu v R; Johnst...
Due to Allport’s (1927) claim that character is merely personality evaluated (and personality is cha...
The subject of character is a major concern in psychology, a central concern in ethics, and an impor...
A comprehensive analysis of the bad character provisions in the Criminal Justice Act 2003 •Explores ...
In our law, the word character has no single, well defined, technical meaning. Sometimes it means ac...
This paper explores the significance of the changing nature of the good character requirement for la...
Every Canadian law society requires thatapplicants for bar admission be of good character The auth...
The problems of character evidence resolved by the new Federal Rules are problems that involve the...
“Character” is a difficult concept to define, as Chief Justice Montgomery discovered. It seems intui...
Almost 40 years ago, Deborah Rhode chronicled numerous problems with the legal profession’s characte...
For some time now the phenomenon known as psychological typing has been finding its way into the stu...
It is time to rethink character evidence. Long notorious as the most frequently litigated evidence i...
The issue of how "forensic psychology " is defined has taken on a new urgency in the conte...
Every state requires good moral character on the part of those applying for admission to practice la...
To work effectively with clients, witnesses, judges, mediators, arbitrators, experts, jurors, and ot...
This case note concerns the recent decision of the Court of Appeal in Hunter v R; Saruwu v R; Johnst...
Due to Allport’s (1927) claim that character is merely personality evaluated (and personality is cha...
The subject of character is a major concern in psychology, a central concern in ethics, and an impor...
A comprehensive analysis of the bad character provisions in the Criminal Justice Act 2003 •Explores ...
In our law, the word character has no single, well defined, technical meaning. Sometimes it means ac...