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Professional Responsibility: A Contemporary Approach 2nd Revised edition [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 1082 pages, height x width: 254x190 mm
  • Sērija : Interactive Casebook Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Nov-2013
  • Izdevniecība: West Academic Press
  • ISBN-10: 0314287817
  • ISBN-13: 9780314287816
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 1082 pages, height x width: 254x190 mm
  • Sērija : Interactive Casebook Series
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Nov-2013
  • Izdevniecība: West Academic Press
  • ISBN-10: 0314287817
  • ISBN-13: 9780314287816
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This textbook/casebook for law students explains the rules students will follow when practicing law and provides a framework for exploring questions of role and professionalism. Content is based on major guidelines and standards such as the Model Rules of Professional Conduct and the Restatement (Third) of the Law of Governing Lawyers. In addition to chapter-opening multiple choice questions, the text includes cases, ethics opinions, and statutes, along with links to full texts of these materials. Of special note are 12 different types of icons used throughout the book, which draw student attention to reflection questions, global perspectives, fun facts, definitions, online links, Latin terms, and Supreme Court decisions. The companion web site offers an ebook and videos. Annotation ©2014 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)
Preface to the Second Edition v
Features of this Casebook vii
Acknowledgments ix
Table of Cases
xxix
Table of Questions
xxxv
Chapter 1 Introducing Professionalism and Legal Ethics
1(26)
A This Professional Responsibility Course Is About You
2(2)
B Professional Responsibility Is About The Legal Profession
4(2)
American Bar Association Commission on Professionalism, "... In the Spirit of Public Service" A Blueprint for the Rekindling of Lawyer Professionalism
6(1)
Revitalizing the Lawyer-Poet: What Lawyers Can Learn From Rock and Roll
7(5)
Russell G. Pearce
Brian Danitz
Romelia S. Leach
Assessing Professionalism: Measuring Progress in the Formation of an Ethical Professional Identity
12(2)
Neil Hamilton
C Can Professional Responsibility Be Taught?
14(1)
Teaching Ethics Seriously: Legal Ethics as the Most Important Subject in Law School
15(2)
Russell G. Pearce
"Eat Your Spinach?"
17(1)
Stephen Gillers
Reforming the Legal Ethics Curriculum: A Comment on Edward Rubin's "What's Wrong with Langdell's Method and What to Do About It"
18(1)
Lauren Solberg
Teaching Ethics Seriously, Legal Ethics as the Most Important Subject in Law School
18(5)
Russell G. Pearce
D The Legal Dimension of Professional Responsibility
23(2)
E Summary
25(2)
Chapter 2 The Basic Elements of Law Practice
27(156)
I Introduction
28(1)
II Defining the Practice of Law
29(32)
A The Prohibition
30(1)
B Limits on Nonlawyers Providing Low Cost Legal Assistance
31(1)
Florida Bar v. Brumbaugh
32(4)
1 Debate Regarding the Rationale for Unauthorized Practice Restrictions
36(2)
2 Legal Advice Books
38(1)
3 Legal Software
39(2)
C Lawyers Working With Nonlawyers and Lawyers Providing Ancillary Nonlegal Services
41(1)
1 Working With Nonlawyers
42(3)
2 Ancillary Businesses
45(2)
D Unauthorized Practice by Lawyers
47(1)
Birbrower, Montalbano, Condon & Frank, P.C. v. Superior Court
48(8)
The Aftermath of Birbrower
56(5)
III Creating the Lawyer-Client Relationship
61(21)
Morris v. Margulis & Grant, P.C., Morris v. Margulis
64(3)
Westinghouse ELEC. Corp. v. Kerr-McGee Corp
67(7)
Exceptions to the General Rule that a Lawyer Has No Obligation to Accept Cases
74(1)
Board of Professional Responsibility of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, Formal Ethics Op. No. 96-F-140, 1996 WL 340719 (1996)
74(3)
Nathanson v. MCAD
77(5)
IV Ending the Lawyer-Client Relationship
82(10)
Whiting v. Lacara
86(6)
V Competence
92(50)
A Discipline
92(6)
In re Wilkinson
98(5)
B Malpractice Liability
103(1)
General
103(1)
Standard of Care
103(1)
Violation of a Rule or Statute
104(1)
Nonclients
104(1)
Contract or Tort?
105(1)
Law Firm Liability
105(1)
Prospective Clients
106(1)
Ziegelheim v. Apollo
107(5)
Am. Bar Ass'n, Standing Comm. on Ethics & Prof'l Responsibility, Formal Op. 02-425 (2002)
112(3)
Lerner v. Laufer
115(7)
C Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
122(1)
Rompilla v. Beard
122(8)
Note on Malpractice Suits Arising from Criminal Cases
130(1)
D Debating Whether The Torture Memos Represent Competent Legal Work
130(1)
What went Wrong: Torture and the Office of Legal Counsel in the Bush Administration: Hearing Before the S. Comm. on the Judiciary, 111th Cong. (2009) (Statement of David Luban, Prof. of Law, Geo. U.L. Center)
131(6)
Letter from Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey & Deputy Attorney General Mark Filip to Mr. H. Marshall Jarret, Counsel, Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR), United States Department of Justice, Re: OPR [ Draft] Report Regarding the Office of Legal Counsel's Memoranda on Issues Relating to the CIA's Use of Enhanced Interrogation Techniques on Suspected Terrorists, (Jan. 19, 2009)
137(5)
VI Allocating Decision-Making Between Lawyer and Client
142(41)
Jones v. Barnes
143(9)
Marcy Strauss, Toward a Revised Model of Attorney-Client Relationship: The Argument for Autonomy
152(1)
Trustees of Schools of Township 42 North v. Schroeder
153(1)
Boyd v. Brett-Major
154(1)
Legal Malpractice § 8.9
155(1)
I. Ronald
E. Mallen
Jeffrey M. Smith
Gilmore v. Utah
156(3)
Comment, Redefining a Final Act: The Fourteenth Amendment and States' Obligation to Prevent Death Row Inmates From Volunteering To Be Put to Death
159(2)
Kristen M. Dama
People v. Chappell
161(4)
Board of Professional Responsibility of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, Op. No. 96-F-140, 1996 WL 340719 (1996)
165(8)
Representing Children
173(1)
Children's Rights and Legal Representation---the Proper Roles of Children, Parents, and Attorneys
174(9)
Jonathan O. Hafen
Chapter 3 The Business, Technology, and Marketing of Legal Services
183(130)
I Introduction
183(1)
II Finding Clients
184(62)
A An Overview of Marketing Legal Services
184(1)
Writing Your Personal Marketing Plan
185(1)
Larry Bodine
Virtual Law Practice: How to Deliver Legal Services Online
186(1)
Stephanie Kimbro
Networking: If Done Right, It Really Works
186(1)
Stacey Clark
Rainmaking: Business Development and Retention Techniques
187(1)
Bonnie Mayfield
Twitter and Linkedin and Facebook, Oh My!
188(1)
Helen W. Gunnarsson
Law Firm Websites that Work: These Firms Use the Internet to Get the Job Done
189(3)
Burkey Belser
Why Lawyers Should Be Allowed to Advertise: A Market Analysis of Legal Services
192(1)
Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr.
Russell G. Pearce
Jeffrey W. Stempel
Why Law Students Should Be Thinking About Entrepreneurship and Innovation in Legal Services
192(3)
Renee Newman Knake
B Solicitation
195(1)
Ohralik v. Ohio State Bar Association
196(7)
In re Primus
203(9)
C Advertising
212(3)
Matter of Zang
215(15)
Alexander v. Cahill
230(16)
III Fees and Billing
246(67)
Am. Bar Ass'n, Standing Comm. on Ethics & Prof'l Responsibility, Billing for Professional Fees, Disbursements and Other Expenses, Formal Op. 93-379 (1993)
250(8)
A The Hourly Billing Controversy
258(1)
The Ethics of Hourly Billing by Attorneys
258(2)
William G. Ross
In Defense of the Billable Hour
260(1)
Douglas R. Richmond
Billable Hours Giving Ground at Law Firms
261(3)
Jonathan D. Glater
B The Controversy Regarding Contingent Fees
264(1)
Comment, Determining A Reasonable Percentage in Establishing a Contingency Fee: A New Tool to Remedy An Old Problem
265(6)
Jeffrey D. Swett
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
271(1)
Debra Baker
Am. Bar Ass'n, Standing Comm. on Ethics & Prof'l Responsibility, Acquiring Ownership in a Client in Connection with Performing Legal Services, Formal Op. 00-418 (2000)
272(5)
The Decline in Lawyer Independence: Lawyer Equity Investments in Clients
277(3)
John S. Dzienkowski
Robert J. Peroni
Lawrence v. Miller
280(14)
C Court-awarded Attorney's Fees
294(1)
On What A "Private Attorney General" Is---and Why It Matters
294(2)
William B. Rubenstein
Note, Shifting the Blame: The Dilemma of Fee-Shifting Statues and Fee-Waiver Settlements
296(1)
Ashley E. Compton
A New Vision of Public Enforcement
297(1)
Michael Waterstone
Perdue v. Kenny A. ex rel. Winn
298(7)
Evans v. Jeff D
305(8)
Chapter 4 Attorney-Client Privilege and the Lawyer's Duty of Confidentiality
313(94)
I Introduction
314(1)
II The Relationship Between the Duty of Confidentiality and the Attorney-Client Privilege
315(2)
III Basics of the Attorney-Client Privilege
317(59)
A Rationale for the Attorney-Client Privilege
318(1)
B Criteria for Attorney-Client Privilege
319(1)
LAWYER-CLIENT PRIVILEGE (Draft, March 1, 2010)
320(3)
1 Client Must Be Seeking Legal Advice
323(1)
In re County of Erie
324(6)
2 The Communications Requirement
330(1)
3 Communication Between Client and Lawyer
331(1)
a Who is the Client?
331(1)
Upjohn Co. v. United States
332(8)
In re Grand Jury Subpoena: Under Seal
340(7)
b Communications to Nonlawyer Agents of the Representation
347(1)
In re New York Renu With Moistureloc Product Liability Litigation
347(5)
4 Expectation of Confidentiality
352(1)
United States v. Hatcher
353(3)
C Waiver of Attorney-Client Privilege
356(1)
1 Introduction
356(1)
2 Authority to Waive the Privilege
356(1)
3 "Selective" Waiver
357(2)
4 Mistaken Disclosures
359(2)
Rule
502. Attorney-Client Privilege and Work Product; Limitations on Waiver
361(2)
Explanatory Note on Rule 502 Prepared by the Judicial Conference Advisory Committee on Evidence Rules
363(4)
5 Duties of the Party Receiving Privileged Information
367(1)
Am. Bar Ass'n, Standing Comm. on Ethics & Prof'l Responsibility, Formal Op. 06-442 (2006)
367(2)
In re NITLA S.A. de C.V.
369(3)
D The Crime-Fraud Exception to the Attorney-Client Privilege
372(4)
IV The Basics of the Duty of Confidentiality Under Rule 1.6
376(31)
A Individuals to Whom a Duty of Confidentiality is Owed
376(1)
Rule 1.18 Duties to Prospective Clients
377(1)
Rule 1.9 Duties To Former Clients
378(1)
B Scope of Information Within the Duty of Confidentiality
378(1)
Lawyers Must Think Twice Before Revealing Anything Relating to Client's Representation
379
1 General Obligations With Respect to Rule 1.6 Information
378(1)
Lawyers Must Think Twice Before Revealing Anything Relating to Client's Representation, 25 ABABNA Lawyers' Manual of Professional Conduct 449
379(2)
2 The Duty of Confidentiality Applies to Information Related to the Representation
381(1)
People v. Belge
382(3)
C Exceptions to the Duty of Confidentiality
385(1)
1 To Prevent Death or Serious Bodily Harm
386(7)
2 To Protect Victims When the Client has Misused the Lawyer's Services
393(1)
Ethics and the Law: A Case History
394(7)
Stuart Taylor, Jr.
Comment 7 and 8 to Rule 1.6
401(2)
3 Lawyer Self-Protection
403(2)
4 Other Exceptions to Rule 1.6
405(2)
Chapter 5 Conflicts of Interest
407(120)
I Introduction
409(1)
II Simultaneous Representations of Multiple Clients
410(43)
A Is There a Current Attorney-Client Relationship?
410(1)
Rohm and Haas Co. v. Dow Chemical Co.
410(1)
Murray v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.
411(3)
B Simultaneous Representation Standards
414(1)
1 "Directly Adverse" Under Rule 1.7(a)(1)
415(3)
Representation of Lender and Borrowers Violated Duties for Residential Home Loans
418(2)
2 "Materially Limited" Under Rule 1.7(a)(2)
420(1)
3 "Reasonably Believes" and "Competent and Diligent Representation" Under Rule 1.7(b)(1)
420(2)
Sanford v. Commonwealth of Virginia
422(7)
Am. Bar Ass'n, Standing Comm. on Ethics & Prof'l Responsibility, Formal Op. 05-434, Dec. 8, 2004
429(1)
4 "Not Prohibited by Law" Under Rule 1.7(b)(2)
430(1)
5 "Assertion of a Claim by One Client against Another" Under Rule 1.7(b)(3)
431(1)
6 "Informed Consent, Confirmed in Writing" Under Rule 1.7(b)(4)
431(3)
7 Waiving Future Conflicts Under Rule 1.7(b)
434(1)
Comment to Rule 1.7
435(1)
8 Protecting Against Conflicts Resulting from Multiple Representation
436(1)
Carnegie Companies, Inc. v. Summit Properties, Inc.
436(3)
C Applications of Rule 1.7
439(1)
1 Marital Issues
439(1)
Ware v. Ware
439(4)
2 Positional Conflicts
443(1)
Am. Bar Ass'n, Standing Comm. on Ethics & Prof'l Responsibility, Formal Op. 93-377 (1993)
443(4)
Williams v. State of Delaware
447(1)
The State Bar of Cal., Standing Comm. on Prof'l Responsibility & Conduct, Formal Op. No. 1989-108 (1989)
448(3)
3 Aggregate Settlements
451(2)
III Conflicts Between Client's Interests and Personal or Financial Interests of the Lawyer
453(13)
A Business Transactions Between Lawyer and Client
453(2)
B Literary Rights Issues
455(1)
Beets v. Collins
456(2)
C Client-Lawyer Sexual Relationships
458(1)
In re Disciplinary Proceedings Against Inglimo
459(2)
Am. Bar Ass'n, Standing Comm. on Ethics & Prof'l Responsibility, Formal Op. 92-364 (July 6, 1992)
461(2)
Matter of Grimm
463(3)
IV Lawyer Advocate as Witness
466(3)
V Representation Adverse to a Former Client
469(14)
A The General Rules
469(3)
Westinghouse Elec. Corp. v. Gulf Oil Corp
472(4)
B Former and Current Government Lawyers
476(3)
Babineaux v. Foster
479(4)
VI Third Party Neutrals and the Mediation Alternative---Model Rules 2.4 and 1.12
483(3)
VII Vicarious Disqualification Under Rule 1.10: Disqualification of an Entire Firm Because of a Tainted Lawyer
486(16)
LaSalle Nat'l Bank v. County of Lake
488(3)
Hempstead Video, Inc. v. Incorporated Village of Valley Stream
491(7)
Kassis v. Teacher's Ins. and Annuity Ass'n
498(4)
VIII Conflicts of Interest in Criminal Cases
502(25)
A The Right to Conflict-Free Representation
503(2)
1 The Duty of Court Inquiry
505(2)
2 Active Conflict Impairing the Representation
507(3)
3 Conflict With the Attorney's Personal Interests
510(2)
B Waiver of the Right to Conflict-Free Counsel
512(5)
C Conflicted Representation and The Right to Counsel of Choice
517(1)
Wheat v. United States
517(10)
Chapter 6 The Lawyer's Duties to the Legal System, the Profession, and Nonclients
527(126)
I Duties to the Court and Other Tribunals
530(67)
A Meritorious Claims
530(2)
B False Testimony and Evidence
532(12)
C Argument
544(2)
D Witnesses
546(4)
E Improper Communications With Judges and Jurors
550(2)
F Non-Adjudicative Proceeding
552(1)
G Stating or Implying Improper Influence
552(1)
H Trial Publicity
553(2)
United States v. Cutler
555(11)
Attorney Grievance Commission of Maryland v. Gansler
566(8)
I Criticism of Judges
574(2)
In re Holtzman
576(3)
Standing Committee on Discipline v. Yagman
579(9)
In re Soares
588(1)
J Decorum and Obedience to Court Rulings
589(1)
Kunstler v. Galligan
589(5)
State v. Jones
594(3)
II Duties to Third Parties and to the Law
597(39)
A Unrepresented Persons
597(2)
B Truthfulness
599(2)
C Obedience to Law
601(2)
Am. Bar Ass'n Comm. on Ethics & Prof'l Responsibility, Use Of Threats Of Prosecution In Connection With A Civil Matter, Formal Op. 92-363 (1992)
603(7)
In re American Continental Corporation/Lincoln Savings and Loan Securities Litigation
610(7)
Sarbanes-Oxley Regulations
617(5)
D National Security and Obedience to Law
622(1)
United States v. Stewart
622(14)
III Duties to Lawyers and to the Bar
636(17)
A Communications With a Represented Party
636(2)
B Inadvertent Disclosures
638(2)
C Restrictions on Practice
640(1)
D Reporting Lawyer and Judge Misconduct
641(2)
In re Michael G. Riehlmann
643(10)
Chapter 7 Special Ethical Rules: Prosecutors and Judges
653(142)
I Prosecutors
654(92)
A The Decision to Charge
660(1)
State ex rel. McKittrick v. Wallach
661(1)
Pugach v. Klein
662(3)
1 Refusing to Prosecute a Certain Type of Crime
665(1)
2 Suspected of Serious Crime, Charged with a Less Serious Crime
666(1)
B Factors Bearing on Prosecutor's Discretion to Charge
667(1)
Excerpt from motion: People v. Strauss-Kahn
668(4)
Stumpf v. Mitchell
672(8)
C Selective Prosecution
680(1)
United States v. Armstrong
680(7)
D Vindictive Prosecution
687(1)
Blackledge v. Perry
687(2)
E Respecting the Right to Counsel
689(1)
United States v. Hammad
690(6)
F Plea Bargaining
696(1)
Bordenkircher v. Hayes
697(4)
1 Inverted Sentencing
701(1)
2 Package Deals
702(1)
G Discovery
703(1)
1 Constitutional Obligation
703(1)
United States v. Agurs
704(7)
Connick v. Thompson
711(10)
People v. Jones
721(3)
People v. Rice
724(1)
2 Brady and Guilty Pleas: United States v. Ruiz
725(2)
3 Rule-Based Requirements
727(1)
American Bar Association Standing Committee On Ethics And Professional Responsibility, Prosecutor's Duty to Disclose Evidence and Information Favorable to the Defense, Formal Opinion 09-454, July 8, 2009
727(6)
H Trial Conduct
733(1)
1 Voir Dire
733(1)
Clausell v. Montana
733(1)
2 Argument During Trial
734(1)
Berger v. United States
734(4)
I Sentencing
738(1)
Pennsylvania v. Dejesus
739(6)
J Post-Conviction Evidence of Innocence
745(1)
II Ethical Standards for Judges
746(49)
A Introduction
746(3)
B Performing the Duties of the Judicial Office
749(4)
C Judicial Disqualification
753(1)
Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., Inc
754(14)
Cheney v. United States District Court for the District of Columbia
768(4)
D Judges' Extrajudicial Activities
772(4)
E Seeking Judicial Election
776(1)
Republican Party of Minnesota v. White
776(16)
F Moving From Judging (or Arbitrating) to Private Practice
792(3)
Chapter 8 What is the Proper Role of a Lawyer?
795(116)
I Introduction
795(1)
II The Role Morality of the Neutral Partisan
796(115)
A The Dominant Conception
796(1)
Lawyers and Justice: An Ethical Study
797(1)
David Luban
Lord Brougham
797(1)
Understanding Lawyers' Ethics
798(1)
Monroe H. Freedman
Abbe Smith
B The Neutral Partisan in Historical and Philosophical Context
799(4)
Board of Professional Responsibility of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, Formal Ethics Op. 96-F-140, 1996 WL 340719 (1996)
803(1)
The Legal Profession as a Blue State: Reflections on Public Philosophy, Jurisprudence, and Legal Ethics
804(11)
Russell G. Pearce
C Competing Visions of Professional Morality
815(1)
1 Moral Responsibility
815(1)
Lawyers and Justice: An Ethical Study
816(1)
David Luban
Ethical Discretion in Lawyering
817
William H. Simon
2 Feminist
527(301)
Portia in a Different Voice: Speculations on a Women's Lawyering Process
828(8)
Carrie Menkel-Meadow
Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law
836(1)
Catherine A. MacKinnon
3 Religious Lawyering
837(1)
The Jewish Lawyer's Question
838(1)
Russell G. Pearce
Heretics in the Temple of the Law: The Promise and Peril of the Religious Lawyering Movement
838(2)
Robert K. Vischer
Christ and the Code: The Dilemma of the Christian Attorney
840(7)
Joseph Allegretti
On Being a Muslim Corporate Lawyer
847(10)
Azizah Al-Hibri
The Jewish Lawyer's Question
857(7)
Russell G. Pearce
Heretics in the Temple of the Law: The Promise and Peril of the Religious Lawyering Movement
864(9)
Robert K. Vischer
4 Racial Justice
873(2)
Identities and Roles: Race, Recognition, and Professional Responsibility
875(16)
David B. Wilkins
5 Civics Teacher
891(2)
The Legal Profession as a Blue State: Reflections on Public Philosophy, Jurisprudence, and Legal Ethics
893(1)
Russell G. Pearce
"Public Service Must Begin At Home": The Lawyer as Civics Teacher in Everyday Practice
894(15)
Bruce A. Green
Russell G. Pearce
Summary
909(2)
Chapter 9 Why Do Lawyers Have Special Privileges and Responsibilities?
911(126)
I The Professional Privilege
912(92)
A Review of Professionalism & Unauthorized Practice
912(1)
B Do the Standards for Bar Admission and Discipline Guarantee that Lawyers Meet the Standards Necessary to Justify Unauthorized Practice of Law Prohibitions?
913(1)
1 Can Consumers Rely on Lawyers to be Competent?
913(2)
Transcript -- Morning Session, Symposium: The Opportunity for Legal Education
915(7)
Transcript -- Afternoon Session, Symposium: The Opportunity for Legal Education
922(5)
Posting of Monroe H. Freedman, On Teaching and Testing in Law School, to Legal Ethics Forum: The Purpose of Law School Classes?
927(1)
Society of American Law Teachers Statement on the Bar Exam
928(6)
Response to the Society of American Law Teachers Statement on the Bar Exam
934(9)
Suzanne Darrow-Kleinhaus
Over-Education of American Lawyers: An Economic and Ethical Analysis of the Requirements for Practicing Law in the United States
943(7)
Vijay Sekhon
2 Can Consumers Rely on Lawyers to be Ethical?
950(3)
National Conference of Bar Examiners, Description of the MPRE
953(1)
Ethics by the Pervasive Method
954(1)
Deborah L. Rhode
"Yale's Markovits Redefines 21st Century Legal Ethics," Interview with Daniel Markovits, Professor, Yale Law School
955(1)
Cait Murphy
"Stanford's Rhode Legal Ethics Rock Star," Interview with Deborah Rhode, Professor, Stanford Law School
955(1)
Cait Murphy
Moral Character as a Professional Credential
956(3)
Deborah L. Rhode
Drugs, Alcohol, Mental Health, and the Vermont Lawyer
959(1)
James C. Gallagher
Decision of Inquiry of the Committee on Character and Fitness of the Supreme Court of Illinois for the Third Appellate District in the Matter of: The Application for Admission to the Bar of Matthew F. Hale
959(7)
Note, Barbarian at the Gates: Revisiting the Case of Matthew F. Hale to Reaffirm that Character and Fitness Evaluations Appropriate Preclude Racists from the Practice of Law
966(1)
Richard L. Sloane
3 Can Consumers Trust that Practicing Lawyers Are Well-Regulated for Competence and Ethics?
967(1)
The True Story on Lawyer Discipline
968(1)
Timothy K. McPike
Mark I. Harrison
Neal v. Clinton
969(3)
Legal Ethics in Decline: The Elite Law Firm, The Elite Law School, and the Moral Formation of the Novice Attorney
972(1)
Patrick J. Schiltz
Ethics Lost: Limitations of Current Approaches to Lawyer Regulation
972(1)
Tanina Rostain
Rules Lawyers Play By
973(1)
Richard W. Painter
HALT, 2006 Lawyer Discipline Report Card
973(2)
C Who Should Be Permitted to Provide Legal Services?
975(1)
1 Nonlawyer Practice
975(1)
Marcus Arnold
975(2)
American Bar Association Commission on Professionalism, "... In the Spirit of Public Service:" A Blueprint for the Rekindling of Lawyer Professionalism
977(1)
Posting of Larry Ribstein, Is Lawyer Licensing Really Necessary? to Ideoblog
978(1)
Is Lawyer Licensing Necessary?, PointofLaw.com
979(5)
Jonathan B. Wilson
Final Thoughts on Lawyer Licensing, PointofLaw.com
984(3)
Larry Ribstein
2 Multidisciplinary Practice
987(1)
Written Remarks of Lawrence J. Fox, You've Got the Soul of the Profession in Your Hands
987(8)
Multidisciplinary Practice and the American Legal Profession: A Market Approach to Regulating the Delivery of Legal Services in the Twenty-First Century
995(5)
John S. Dzienkowski
Robert J. Peroni
Multidisciplinary Practice Redux: Globalization, Core Values, and Reviving the MDP Debate in America
1000(2)
Paul D. Paton
Dzienkowski & Peroni, Multidisciplinary Practice and the American Legal Profession: A Market Approach to Regulating the Delivery of Legal Services in the Twenty-First Century
1002(2)
II Special Responsibilities
1004(33)
A Pro Bono
1004(1)
Cultures of Commitment: Pro Bono for Lawyers and Law Students
1005(11)
Deborah L. Rhode
What Good is Pro Bono?
1016(5)
Heather MacDonald
B Should the Rules Mandate Equal Opportunity?
1021(1)
Am. Bar Ass'n Presidential Initiative Comm'n on Diversity, 2010 ABA Study of the State of Diversity in the Legal Profession
1021(1)
Note, New Rule, New York: A Bifocal Approach to Discipline and Discrimination
1022(7)
Nicole Lancia
Legal Ethics as a Means to Address the Problem of Elite Law Firm Non-diversity
1029(6)
Akshat Tewary
C What does it mean to be a lawyer?
1035(2)
Index 1037