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Articles 1 - 9 of 9
Full-Text Articles in Law
Prosecuting Doctors For Trusting Patients, Deborah Hellman
Prosecuting Doctors For Trusting Patients, Deborah Hellman
Deborah Hellman
In an escalating phase of our country’s war on drugs, doctors treating patients in pain are being prosecuted for drug trafficking under the Controlled Substances Act. While doctors surely can be guilty of drug trafficking when they sell drugs for money, lately some doctors have been prosecuted for violations of a statute that requires knowingly distributing or dispensing controlled substances in an unauthorized manner for simply being willfully blind to the fact that their patients were reselling the drugs. While willful blindness may be an apt substitute for knowledge in the traditional drug courier scenario, doctors in these cases are …
Betraying Truth: The Abuse Of Journalistic Ethics In Middle East Reporting, Kenneth Lasson
Betraying Truth: The Abuse Of Journalistic Ethics In Middle East Reporting, Kenneth Lasson
Kenneth Lasson
In a world at once increasingly chaotic and historically interconnected, the news media have come to play unprecedented roles both in the virtually instantaneous recording of fast-moving events and in influencing the occurrence and evolution of those events themselves. The media, of course, are not beyond reproach. Freedom of the press does not mean immunity from criticism. Reputable journalists abide by standards which, though largely self-imposed, are presumed to be honestly applied. When these principles are abrogated, violators should be taken to task. Nowhere has this responsibility been more tested than in the Middle East, where for over a half-century …
Evidence, Belief, And Action: The Failure Of Equipoise To Resolve The Ethical Tension In The Randomized Clinical Trial, Deborah Hellman
Evidence, Belief, And Action: The Failure Of Equipoise To Resolve The Ethical Tension In The Randomized Clinical Trial, Deborah Hellman
Deborah Hellman
No abstract provided.
The Economics Of The Attorney-Client Privilege: A Comprehensive Review And A New Justification, Keith A. Kendall
The Economics Of The Attorney-Client Privilege: A Comprehensive Review And A New Justification, Keith A. Kendall
Keith A Kendall
The attorney-client privilege is one of the fundamental aspects of legal professional practice in the United States. Despite this central importance, there have been many calls over the centuries for the privilege’s abolition. A relatively recent trend is for such criticisms to be based on an economic analysis of the privilege’s mechanics, including incentives for rent seeking behavior, signaling problems faced by clients and incentives to overinvest in litigation. Responses to these criticisms that also utlize economic reasoning center on the economics of information production, recognizing that the privilege serves a useful function, notwithstanding the critiques. In addition to these …
Judging By Appearances: Professional Ethics, Expressive Government, And The Moral Significance Of How Things Seem, Deborah Hellman
Judging By Appearances: Professional Ethics, Expressive Government, And The Moral Significance Of How Things Seem, Deborah Hellman
Deborah Hellman
No abstract provided.
Pushing Drugs Or Pushing The Envelope: The Prosecution Of Doctors In Connection With Over-Prescribing Of Opium-Based Drugs, Deborah Hellman
Pushing Drugs Or Pushing The Envelope: The Prosecution Of Doctors In Connection With Over-Prescribing Of Opium-Based Drugs, Deborah Hellman
Deborah Hellman
No abstract provided.
Civility Issues In Federal Court Practice, Daniel Coquillette, Judith Mcmorrow
Civility Issues In Federal Court Practice, Daniel Coquillette, Judith Mcmorrow
Daniel R. Coquillette
No abstract provided.
Attorney Conduct And The Securities And Exchange Commission, Daniel Coquillette, Judith Mcmorrow
Attorney Conduct And The Securities And Exchange Commission, Daniel Coquillette, Judith Mcmorrow
Daniel R. Coquillette
No abstract provided.
The Dilemma Of The Vengeful Client: A Prescriptive Framework For Cooling The Flames Of Anger, Robin Slocum
The Dilemma Of The Vengeful Client: A Prescriptive Framework For Cooling The Flames Of Anger, Robin Slocum
Robin Slocum
Lawyers are presented with a challenging dilemma when counseling angry clients who seek to use the legal system as a weapon for vengeance. Legal scholars have argued that lawyers should, where appropriate, dissuade their angry clients from litigation strategies that are immoral or arguably unethical. However, angry clients are remarkably resistant to appeals based on morality and reason. Thus, it is not surprising that lawyers have been largely ineffective in their efforts to dissuade angry clients from using the legal system as a battlefield. Instead, lawyers often reluctantly defer to clients whose judgment is impaired by their emotional reactivity.
This …