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Full-Text Articles in Law

Rule, Story, And Commitment In The Teaching Of Legal Ethics, Roger C. Cramton, Susan P. Koniak Oct 1996

Rule, Story, And Commitment In The Teaching Of Legal Ethics, Roger C. Cramton, Susan P. Koniak

Cornell Law Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Lights, Camera, Litigate: Lawyers And The Media In Canada And The United States, Charles W. Wolfram Oct 1996

Lights, Camera, Litigate: Lawyers And The Media In Canada And The United States, Charles W. Wolfram

Cornell Law Faculty Publications

Drawing on recent high profile cases in Canada and the United States, the author examines the different extent to which lawyers in those two countries comment to the media about ongoing litigation. He investigates various formal constraints upon lawyer comment, such as court-imposed publication bans and rules of professional responsibility. He also looks at the way in which lawyer behavior is attributable to non-formal, cultural determinants.


A Tribute To Professor Edward J. Littlejohn, John E. Mogk Oct 1996

A Tribute To Professor Edward J. Littlejohn, John E. Mogk

Law Faculty Research Publications

No abstract provided.


Fall 1996 Oct 1996

Fall 1996

Bill of Particulars

No abstract provided.


Dean's Message And Report, Alfred C. Aman Jr. Oct 1996

Dean's Message And Report, Alfred C. Aman Jr.

Alfred Aman Jr. (1991-2002)

No abstract provided.


Speculating On The Future Of Attorney Responsibility To Nonclients, Barbara Glesner Fines Oct 1996

Speculating On The Future Of Attorney Responsibility To Nonclients, Barbara Glesner Fines

Faculty Works

No abstract provided.


Rediscovering Discovery Ethics, W. Bradley Wendel Jul 1996

Rediscovering Discovery Ethics, W. Bradley Wendel

Cornell Law Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Noted Japanese Jurist Speaks Out Against Capital Punishment Jul 1996

Noted Japanese Jurist Speaks Out Against Capital Punishment

Alfred Aman Jr. (1991-2002)

No abstract provided.


In Defense Of Lawyers, Alfred C. Aman Jr. Jul 1996

In Defense Of Lawyers, Alfred C. Aman Jr.

Alfred Aman Jr. (1991-2002)

No abstract provided.


Using Decision Trees As Tools For Settlement, Marjorie Corman Aaron Jun 1996

Using Decision Trees As Tools For Settlement, Marjorie Corman Aaron

Faculty Articles and Other Publications

While experienced lawyers can some­ times develop an intuitive sense of what a case is worth, their intuition may not be sufficient in a case of considerable complexity. Furthermore, intuitive "gut sense" valuations are hard to support or explain to clients.

Decision trees allow the parties and their lawyers to see more clearly how the strengths and weaknesses of their positions on specific issues will affect the overall value of a case. Long popular in the business community, deci­sion analysis has evolved as a tool for lawyers to help make decisions in complex litigation.


Vol. 6, No. 1 (Spring 1996) Apr 1996

Vol. 6, No. 1 (Spring 1996)

IU Law Update

No abstract provided.


An Attorney's Right To Retain Fees Derived From A Fraudulent Law Suit, Leonard Pertnoy Apr 1996

An Attorney's Right To Retain Fees Derived From A Fraudulent Law Suit, Leonard Pertnoy

Faculty Articles

The remedy of restitution, used to prevent unjust enrichment, is a fundamental right firmly entrenched in the common law. This is especially true in cases where a victim seeks equitable relief to require the return of money or property obtained as a result of fraud. However, should the defrauded person always be entitled to be made whole? Similarly, the remedy of forfeiture is also a deeply rooted legal concept, finding its beginnings in early English common law. Originally, forfeiture was a punishment annexed by law to some illegal act. However, the concept of deodand now not only includes forfeiture of …


Lon Fuller, The Model Code, And The Model Rules, John M.A. Dipippa Mar 1996

Lon Fuller, The Model Code, And The Model Rules, John M.A. Dipippa

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Conflicts Of Interests In The Representation Of Children, Nancy J. Moore Mar 1996

Conflicts Of Interests In The Representation Of Children, Nancy J. Moore

Faculty Scholarship

Conflicts of interests arise whenever the representation of a client may be materially limited by the lawyer's duties to either another client or a third person or by the interests of the lawyer herself.' Analyzing such conflicts typically requires identifying situations involving a potentially impermissible conflict, determining whether the conflict is consentable, and, if it is, obtaining consent after full disclosure.2 Conflicts analysis is difficult enough when the client is an adult.3 When the client is a child, however, the analysis is complicated by a number of factors. For example, in the wide variety of cases in which children (or …


A False Public Sentiment: Narrative And Visual Images Of Women Lawyers In Film, Louise Everett Graham, Geraldine Maschio Jan 1996

A False Public Sentiment: Narrative And Visual Images Of Women Lawyers In Film, Louise Everett Graham, Geraldine Maschio

Law Faculty Scholarly Articles

The Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments claimed for women not only equality of rights under the law, but a cultural status that was not the product of compliance. It sought to enfranchise women across the entire panoply of social activity, and to afford them representation in a number of areas. Whether women have achieved the stature aspired to by the Declaration of Sentiments can be approached in a variety of ways. We have chosen to do so by exploring cinematic images of women lawyers.

Popular film serves as a cultural text. When we look at a group of films on …


Information Redlining: A List Of Selected Readings, Timothy L. Coggins Jan 1996

Information Redlining: A List Of Selected Readings, Timothy L. Coggins

Law Faculty Publications

In earlier essays Henry Perritt, Marvin Anderson, Gary Bass and Patrice McDermott discuss the increasing use of computers to access information through the information superhighway, the Internet and online services, the increasing reliance on electronic formats by publishers and the federal government and the continuing debate about "information redlining." They indicate that information redlining is broader than just the availability and effects of technology and enhanced online services on lower income, minority and rural communities. It also deals with what information will be available to these groups. As more and more data comes in digital form and when some information …


Succeeding In Law School: A Comparison Of Woman's Experience At Brooklyn Law School And The University Of Pennsylvania, Marsha Garrison, Brian Tomko, Ivan Yip Jan 1996

Succeeding In Law School: A Comparison Of Woman's Experience At Brooklyn Law School And The University Of Pennsylvania, Marsha Garrison, Brian Tomko, Ivan Yip

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


The Firm Revisited: Somebody At The Justice Department Has Been Reading John Grisham, Michael Vitiello Jan 1996

The Firm Revisited: Somebody At The Justice Department Has Been Reading John Grisham, Michael Vitiello

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


Projecting The Washington College Of Law Into The Future, Claudio Grossman Jan 1996

Projecting The Washington College Of Law Into The Future, Claudio Grossman

Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals

No abstract provided.


The Vaporous And The Real In Former-Client Conflicts, Charles W. Wolfram Jan 1996

The Vaporous And The Real In Former-Client Conflicts, Charles W. Wolfram

Cornell Law Faculty Publications



Jewish Lawyer's Question, The Essay, Russell G. Pearce Jan 1996

Jewish Lawyer's Question, The Essay, Russell G. Pearce

Faculty Scholarship

Martin Buber describes the question of how to "affirm" our Jewish identity in the modem world as "the personal Jewish question, the root of all Jewish questions, the question we must discover within ourselves, clarify within ourselves, and decide within ourselves. This essay raises the "Jewish question" for lawyers. First, it explores some reasons why Jewish lawyers answer the question by separating their professional selves from their religious selves. Second, it observes that such an answer is contrary to the perspective-rooted in tradition but also common to the otherwise dissonant streams of Judaism today-that one's Judaism enters every moment of …


Guests In Another's House: An Analysis Of Racially Disparate Bar Performance, 23 Fla. St. U. L. Rev. 721 (1996), Cecil J. Hunt Ii Jan 1996

Guests In Another's House: An Analysis Of Racially Disparate Bar Performance, 23 Fla. St. U. L. Rev. 721 (1996), Cecil J. Hunt Ii

UIC Law Open Access Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Winter 1996 Jan 1996

Winter 1996

Bill of Particulars

No abstract provided.


Find A Way To Make A Difference, Alfred C. Aman Jr. Jan 1996

Find A Way To Make A Difference, Alfred C. Aman Jr.

Alfred Aman Jr. (1991-2002)

The following is adapted from an address to the entering class.


Ethical Commitments, Anthony V. Alfieri Jan 1996

Ethical Commitments, Anthony V. Alfieri

Articles

No abstract provided.


Reap What You Sow, Gordon J. Beggs Jan 1996

Reap What You Sow, Gordon J. Beggs

Law Faculty Articles and Essays

Unfortunately, with the adoption and revision of formal ethics codes, moral teaching has virtually disappeared from American legal ethics. Law professors, generally, do not consider it their responsibility to teach morality, and our profession today lacks a common moral standard. The Judeo-Christian principles expressed in Proverbs, however, provide a timely challenge to lawyers by advocating values that include justice, purity, mercy, honesty and civility.


The Rhythms Of Hope And Disappointment In The Language Of Judging (St. John's University School Of Law: Rededication Symposia), James Boyd White Jan 1996

The Rhythms Of Hope And Disappointment In The Language Of Judging (St. John's University School Of Law: Rededication Symposia), James Boyd White

Articles

I want to talk today about a certain aspect or dimension of the language of judging. From one point of view the quality I mean can be seen as a kind of idealism inherent in legal lan­guage; from another, as a kind of fundamental hypocrisy; from still another, as a simultaneously tragic and comic element in le­gal life.


A Symposium Precis, Thomas E. Baker Jan 1996

A Symposium Precis, Thomas E. Baker

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


On Seeing Chinese Law From A Chinese Point Of View: An Appreciative Look At The Scholarly Career Of Professor William Jones, Janet Ainsworth Jan 1996

On Seeing Chinese Law From A Chinese Point Of View: An Appreciative Look At The Scholarly Career Of Professor William Jones, Janet Ainsworth

Faculty Articles

In this appreciative review, Professor William Jones's work is used to demonstrate that sensitivity to issues of methodology are indispensable for comparative law scholars. Professor Jones's work is valuable because (1) it is marked both by an awareness of the methodological difficulties faced by the comparativist and a confidence that it is nonetheless possible to transcend these difficulties and (2) it makes a meaningful contribution to the development of an understanding of a foreign legal order. The article concludes by stating that Professor Jones's work will influence future generations of scholars trying to answer the why, what, and how of …


The Broad Life Of The Jewish Lawyer: Integrating Spirituality, Scholarship And Profession, Samuel J. Levine Jan 1996

The Broad Life Of The Jewish Lawyer: Integrating Spirituality, Scholarship And Profession, Samuel J. Levine

Scholarly Works

The religious individual faces the constant challenge of reconciling religious ideals with the mundane realities of everyday life. Indeed, it is through the performance of ordinary daily activities that a person can truly observe such religious duties as serving God and loving one's neighbor. For the Orthodox Jew, an intricate set of religious laws and principles governs every area of life. In choosing a career, an Orthodox Jew must therefore be concerned that professional obligations not interfere with the fulfillment of religious ones. While religious duties impose obligations on the religious individual, at the same time they provide opportunities to …