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Selected Works

Selected Works

Ethics

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Articles 181 - 199 of 199

Full-Text Articles in Law

When The Criminal Client Intends To Commit Perjury, Grace M. Giesel Jan 2008

When The Criminal Client Intends To Commit Perjury, Grace M. Giesel

Grace M. Giesel

In the case of Brown v. Commonwealth, 226 S.W.3d 74 (Ky. 2007), the Kentucky Supreme Court has provided trial courts and lawyers, especially criminal lawyers, with some much needed ethical guidance. While the case itself was a criminal appeal, not an attorney discipline matter, the Court’s opinion provides insight into the ethical sticky wicket of the proper conduct of the lawyer for a criminal defendant when the defendant intends to commit perjury. Such a situation pits the constitutional rights of criminal defendants against the ethical duties of defense counsel to act with candor to the court.


Beneath The Surface: Metadata, Transparency And The Ethical Use Of Information, Michael Katz Dec 2007

Beneath The Surface: Metadata, Transparency And The Ethical Use Of Information, Michael Katz

Michael Katz

While the gains from the digital revolution are tremendous in terms of increased efficiency, access to information and searchability, the change in information format has caught some off guard. No longer is data limited to what is available on a piece of paper. Yet there is a price to pay for these gains. Where once a letter’s recipient could not see anything but what the sender openly presented in the letter, today that email, word processing document and spreadsheet all contain additional information not readily visible on their face. Beneath the surface, packed into the file, exists metadata - information …


Achieving Early And Substantial Greenhouse Gas Reductions Under A Post-Kyoto Agreement, John Dernbach Dec 2007

Achieving Early And Substantial Greenhouse Gas Reductions Under A Post-Kyoto Agreement, John Dernbach

John C. Dernbach

This article explains why policy makers should seriously consider substantial early reductions in greenhouse gas emissions as a part of any post-Kyoto framework, and sets out suggested elements of a framework for early action in a post-Kyoto agreement. Substantial early reductions are needed because of the growing urgency of the climate change science, the precautionary approach identified in the Framework Convention on Climate Change as a decision-making principle, the fact that cost-effective measures are now available, and the significant non-climate benefits (security, economic, social, and environmental) that can be achieved by implementing them. As a practical matter, too, long-term greenhouse …


Implementing Geographic Information Technologies Ethically, Harlan J. Onsrud Dec 2007

Implementing Geographic Information Technologies Ethically, Harlan J. Onsrud

Harlan J Onsrud

Spatial technologies are changing relations among citizens, between citizens and businesses, and between citizens and their governments. Profound implications regarding our relationships with each other are being raised by the expanding use of mobile, spatial, and context-aware technologies, the building of interoperable coordinated spatial data infrastructures and pervasive sensor-networks, the use of location as the foundation for many current and future business and scientific information systems, and the widespread enablement of individuals to gather their own spatial data, report it to others and generate their own spatial resources. How can we within the geospatial community better weave our way through …


Ethics And Standards Of Tax Practice In The New Age Of Transparency: From Self-Assessment To Self-Audit, Emily A. Parker, Robert D. Probasco Mar 2007

Ethics And Standards Of Tax Practice In The New Age Of Transparency: From Self-Assessment To Self-Audit, Emily A. Parker, Robert D. Probasco

Robert Probasco

No abstract provided.


Why We Still Need A Model Rule For Collaborative Law: A Reply To Professor Lande, Christopher M. Fairman Feb 2007

Why We Still Need A Model Rule For Collaborative Law: A Reply To Professor Lande, Christopher M. Fairman

Christopher M Fairman

No abstract provided.


Blink And They're Gone: A "Quick-Take" On Impulse Purchase Behavior And Enrollment Marketing In Higher Education, Oscar T. Mcknight, Ronald Paugh, Vahn Knight Dec 2006

Blink And They're Gone: A "Quick-Take" On Impulse Purchase Behavior And Enrollment Marketing In Higher Education, Oscar T. Mcknight, Ronald Paugh, Vahn Knight

Oscar T McKnight Ph.D.

The college-decision process that prospective students make has been characterized as deliberate and prolonged -- a classic extensive problem solving behavior model. New research indicates that a significant proportion of students engage in impluse purchase behavior when choosing a college. Marketing implications for enrollment management and "Blink An Intervention Model" are presented


Civil Engagement Versus Social Engineering: What Can Be Learned From Nanojury Uk, Michele L. Mekel Mar 2006

Civil Engagement Versus Social Engineering: What Can Be Learned From Nanojury Uk, Michele L. Mekel

Michele L Mekel

Although nanotechnology is pervasive in scientific circles, it has only just begun to cross the public's radar screen here in the United States and around the world. But, as nanotechnology moves from under the microscope into the mainstream at an ever-accelerating pace, and as the citizenry begins to take notice of this nascent technology that promises everything from revolutionizing the economy to curing intractable diseases, understanding public sentiment toward nanotechnology and the societal issues it raises is critical to the formulation of appropriate nanopolicy.


The Impact Of Blogging On The Practice Of Law: Hit The Snooze Button, Tom W. Bell Dec 2005

The Impact Of Blogging On The Practice Of Law: Hit The Snooze Button, Tom W. Bell

Tom W. Bell

To forecast how blogging will impact the practice of law, we need to consider how some similar, equally revolutionary technology has impacted attorneys. I nominate the clock radio. Given that example, you might suppose that I don't think blogging will radically change the practice of law. Correct. Blogging has many virtues. It offers a largely harmless outlet for extroverted cranks and cheap entertainment for procrastinating office workers. Blogging even stands to do some very real good. I have nothing against blogging; I blog, myself. I simply don't think it will change the practice of law very much. Why not? First, …


Channeling Buzz Or Bucks? Ethical Implications For Marketing, Oscar T. Mcknight, Ronald Paugh, Vahn Knight Dec 2005

Channeling Buzz Or Bucks? Ethical Implications For Marketing, Oscar T. Mcknight, Ronald Paugh, Vahn Knight

Oscar T McKnight Ph.D.

Too often higher education officials equate successful enrollment management with determining the appropriate financial-aid package, assuming the student matriculates. However, there are competing theories as to why a student may be attracted to a particular college. Could it be the "buzz"? This study examines the relationship between buzz and bucks with respect to enrollment objectives. Research findings indicate that it is not an either-or proposition. Moreover, marketers are presented with an ethical responsibility to safeguard the public.


Dorothy Day And Innovative Social Justice: A View From Inside The Box, Randy Lee Dec 2004

Dorothy Day And Innovative Social Justice: A View From Inside The Box, Randy Lee

Randy Lee

No abstract provided.


A Law Professor On Being Fashioned, Randy Lee Dec 2004

A Law Professor On Being Fashioned, Randy Lee

Randy Lee

No abstract provided.


Alj Ethics: Conundrums, Dilemmas, And Paradoxes, John L. Gedid Dec 2001

Alj Ethics: Conundrums, Dilemmas, And Paradoxes, John L. Gedid

John L. Gedid

No abstract provided.


Modern Ethical Dilemmas For Aljs And Government Lawyers: Conflicts Of Interest, Appearances Of Impropriety, And Other Ethical Considerations, Introduction, Robert C. Power Dec 2001

Modern Ethical Dilemmas For Aljs And Government Lawyers: Conflicts Of Interest, Appearances Of Impropriety, And Other Ethical Considerations, Introduction, Robert C. Power

Robert C Power

No abstract provided.


Professionalism Lost: Where Have You Gone Atticus Finch? Our Nation Turns Its Lonely Eyes To You..., Beau James Brock Mar 2001

Professionalism Lost: Where Have You Gone Atticus Finch? Our Nation Turns Its Lonely Eyes To You..., Beau James Brock

Beau James Brock

Attorney are only, as a group, what the public preceives us to be. Whether that be as knights in shining armor or as something far less noble.


A Lawyer’S Call To Integrity: A Response, Mary Kate Kearney Dec 1999

A Lawyer’S Call To Integrity: A Response, Mary Kate Kearney

Mary Kate Kearney

No abstract provided.


The Foreign Notarial Legal Services Monopoly: Why Should We Care?, Pedro A. Malavet Dec 1997

The Foreign Notarial Legal Services Monopoly: Why Should We Care?, Pedro A. Malavet

Pedro A. Malavet

This piece serves three purposes: (1) briefly to take issue with the current treatment of comparative scholarship, especially how it is ignored by main law reviews; (2) to be a succinct introduction to the Latin Notary; and (3) to point out that the adversarial ethic and notarial impartiality can co-exist and even complement one another. It presents the notary as an example of a non-adversarial ethic, in a system that has other professionals who are ruled by the adversarial ethic. It does not advocate the abandonment of the adversarial ethic, but, rather, argues that in certain legal situations a non-adversarial …


The State Interest In The Good Citizen: Constitutional Balance Between The Citizen And The Perfectionist State, Steve Sheppard Dec 1993

The State Interest In The Good Citizen: Constitutional Balance Between The Citizen And The Perfectionist State, Steve Sheppard

Steve Sheppard

Judges must have flexibility when responding to the changing norms of justice in society, but they must also maintain predictability to enhance the cultural acceptance of the Court’s authority and the authority of law in society. Predictability demands that a rationale for each decision be communicated by the authors of opinions so that it can be replicable by other courts.

The debate over a preferred method of adjudication, balancing or categorical, is moot because the two methods are not mutually exclusive. The important issue is the definition of interests to be promoted or discouraged by law, which must also be …


Reflections On Identity, Diversity And Morality, Deborah Post Dec 1989

Reflections On Identity, Diversity And Morality, Deborah Post

Deborah W. Post

No abstract provided.