Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Legal education (2)
- Access to justice (1)
- Bar associations (1)
- Civil legal services (1)
- Colorado (1)
-
- Cost (1)
- Court rules (1)
- Critical legal studies (1)
- Decision-making (1)
- Law professors (1)
- Law review articles (1)
- Law school tuition (1)
- Law schools (1)
- Leadership (1)
- Legal ethics (1)
- Legal scholarship (1)
- Limited-scope representation (1)
- Mindfulness (1)
- Modest means representation (1)
- Partial representation (1)
- Pro bono (1)
- Real options (1)
- Robert Nagel (1)
- Self-help (1)
- Self-represented litigants (1)
- Unbundling (1)
- Value (1)
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Law
Envisioning 100% Access To Justice In Colorado, Daniel M. Taubman, Melissa Hart
Envisioning 100% Access To Justice In Colorado, Daniel M. Taubman, Melissa Hart
Publications
No abstract provided.
Is Legal Scholarship Worth Its Cost?, Paul Campos
Can Practicing Mindfulness Improve Lawyer Decision-Making, Ethics, And Leadership?, Peter H. Huang
Can Practicing Mindfulness Improve Lawyer Decision-Making, Ethics, And Leadership?, Peter H. Huang
Publications
Jon Kabat-Zinn, the founder of mindfulness-based stress reduction, defines mindfulness as paying attention in a curious, deliberate, kind, and non-judgmental way to life as it unfolds each moment. Psychologist Ellen Langer defines mindfulness as a flexible state of mind actively engaging in the present, noticing new things, and being sensitive to context. Langer differentiates mindfulness from mindlessness, which she defines as acting based upon past behavior instead of the present and being stuck in a fixed, solitary perspective, oblivious to alternative multiple viewpoints. Something called mindfulness is currently very fashionable and has been so for some time now in American …