Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Attorney (1)
- Community organization (1)
- Fordham Urban Law Journal (1)
- Informed consent (1)
- Interfaith dialogue (1)
-
- Jewish lawyers (1)
- Law in film (1)
- Law practice (1)
- Lawyer (1)
- Lawyerly conduct (1)
- Lawyerly problem solving (1)
- Legal services (1)
- Limited liability partnership (1)
- Mediation (1)
- Newell & Simon's (1)
- Professional responsibility (1)
- Religion (1)
- Religious belief (1)
- Religious lawyers (1)
- So Goes A Nation: Lawyers and Communities (1)
- So Goes the Nation (1)
- The Workplace Project (1)
- Think like a lawyer (1)
- William Stringfellow (1)
Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in Law
Feminist Legal Theory, Feminist Lawmaking, And The Legal Profession, Elizabeth M. Schneider, Cynthia Grant
Feminist Legal Theory, Feminist Lawmaking, And The Legal Profession, Elizabeth M. Schneider, Cynthia Grant
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
What If There Is No Client?: Prosecutors As "Counselors" Of Crime Victims, Stacy Caplow
What If There Is No Client?: Prosecutors As "Counselors" Of Crime Victims, Stacy Caplow
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Professional Responsibility And Liability Issues Related To Limited Liability Law Partnerships, Susan Saab Fortney
Professional Responsibility And Liability Issues Related To Limited Liability Law Partnerships, Susan Saab Fortney
Faculty Scholarship
This article surveys the professional responsibility and liability issues related to attorneys practicing in limited liability law firms. Part I of this article provides background information regarding the development of the limited liability partnership (LLP) and its popularity among legal professionals. Part II tackles the 1996 ethics opinion on LLPs rendered by the American Bar Association Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility. This article criticizes the ABA opinion by examining the conclusions and reasoning articulated in the opinion, indentifying disciplinary rules that the opinion did not address, and considering the possible effects of the opinion. Part III focuses on …
Learning From The Unpleasant Truths Of Interfaith Conversations: William Stringfellow's Lessons For The Jewish Lawyer, Russell G. Pearce
Learning From The Unpleasant Truths Of Interfaith Conversations: William Stringfellow's Lessons For The Jewish Lawyer, Russell G. Pearce
Faculty Scholarship
As the religious lawyering movement expands, so too will the opportunities for interfaith conversations about lawyering. At the level of superficial pleasantries, these conversations will probably add warm feelings of camraderie but little else. When they advance to deeper levels of intellectual and emotional connection, they offer the potential for developing close friendships, learning significant new insights, and discovering hurtful differences. Only by risking the pain of such conversations can we gain the full benefit of interfaith conversation for enriching our "zest for spiritual living." This essay will employ the writings of William Stringfellow, a Christian lawyer and theologian, to …
Informed Consent In Mediation: A Guiding Principle For Truly Educated Decisionmaking , Jacqueline Nolan-Haley
Informed Consent In Mediation: A Guiding Principle For Truly Educated Decisionmaking , Jacqueline Nolan-Haley
Faculty Scholarship
Informed consent has a central role to play in mediation. Without it, mediation's promises of autonomy and self-determination are empty. This Article has given the theoretical and policy justifications for a reform of mediation practice that honors the principle of informed consent. I have argued for a contextualized approach that takes into account mediation's location, the voluntariness of the parties' consent, and their representational status. This kind of analysis will lead to a more informed practice of mediation decisionmaking than exists currently and provide a perspective that can more prudently guide a mediator's conduct. The proposed approach promotes greater fairness …
Jacob's Blessing, Cooperative Grace, And Practicing Law With A Limp, John M.A. Dipippa
Jacob's Blessing, Cooperative Grace, And Practicing Law With A Limp, John M.A. Dipippa
Faculty Scholarship
How does a lawyer's religious beliefs affect the lawyer's practice? I will answer that question by reflecting on baseball players, wrestling with mysterious strangers, and practicing law with a limp. This essay is divided into four sections. First, I will share the story of baseball star Sandy Koufax's refusal to pitch on Yom Kippur. Second, I will present a brief theology of grace. Third, I will discuss the Genesis story of Jacob's wrestling match with the Angel. Finally, I will relate a personal experience from my own practice. In truth, each of these sections demonstrates the same theme: that God's …
A Response To The Video, Charles F. Sabel
A Response To The Video, Charles F. Sabel
Faculty Scholarship
Let me preface my remarks by informing you that I am not a lawyer. That means that there are things I don't get and things that I'll say that you may not grasp immediately, because there are certain assumptions we don't share. To illustrate that, let me just tell you, I don't even get lawyer jokes.
For example, when I saw the movie So Goes A Nation, and Sam Sue says, "Law schools teach basic skills," I didn't realize that was a joke until you all laughed at it. So there are many subtleties of this sort that escape me. …
Lawyering In The State Of Nature: Instinct And Automaticity In Legal Problem Solving , Ian Weinstein
Lawyering In The State Of Nature: Instinct And Automaticity In Legal Problem Solving , Ian Weinstein
Faculty Scholarship
This article explains why lawyers do not think or talk like other people, how they got this way, and why this is both a good thing and a bad thing. I have watched hundreds of law students leave their old ways of thinking and talking behind and begin to sound like lawyers. One marker of the progress from lay person to lawyer is the emergence of the ability to tell a coherent fact and law story about a new legal problem. I have sometimes celebrated this professional progress and sometimes lamented the loss of common sense, but my lawyerly analysis …