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Articles 121 - 133 of 133
Full-Text Articles in Law
Newsletters: One Step Closer, Marianne Mason
Newsletters: One Step Closer, Marianne Mason
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Foreword: Postmodernism And Law, Pierre Schlag
Normativity And The Politics Of Form, Pierre Schlag
Normativity And The Politics Of Form, Pierre Schlag
Publications
No abstract provided.
Lawyers And Liberations, Robert E. Rodes
Lawyers And Liberations, Robert E. Rodes
Journal Articles
The Jesuit educational tradition stresses the importance of service to the community and especially to its underprivileged members. Much of the discussion at the Ignatian Year celebration held at St. Louis University centered on the role of the law school in the Jesuit educational tradition. However, I would like to propose that this discussion take on a much larger focus.
The ideas of community service, solidarity with the poor and professionalism within an ethical context, although integral to the Jesuit tradition, are relevant to society as a whole. Furthermore, integration of these concepts into law school education is merely a …
The Problem Of The Subject, Pierre Schlag
Teaching International Law In The Career Of A Law Academic, Mary Ellen O'Connell
Teaching International Law In The Career Of A Law Academic, Mary Ellen O'Connell
Articles by Maurer Faculty
No abstract provided.
Time For Every Purpose Under The Heaven: Service – The National Bar Association Model, Beverly Mcqueary Smith
Time For Every Purpose Under The Heaven: Service – The National Bar Association Model, Beverly Mcqueary Smith
Scholarly Works
No abstract provided.
Law Review Correspondence: The View From Way Down Under The Manuscripts, Dale Carpenter
Law Review Correspondence: The View From Way Down Under The Manuscripts, Dale Carpenter
Faculty Journal Articles and Book Chapters
No abstract provided.
Comparative Law: Its Purposes And Possibilities, Christopher L. Blakesley
Comparative Law: Its Purposes And Possibilities, Christopher L. Blakesley
Scholarly Works
Comparative law is much more than “matching laws.” Professor Grossfield’s short, lively book will certainly awaken its German reader to the value, indeed necessity, of comparative law and comparative insights in his or her own practice or scholarly work. This, he aims at the skeptic who may think of comparative law or foreign legal systems as arcane and useless fluff, too luxurious for the hard working “practical-minded” practitioner. Professor Grossfield throws the cold water of realization into this skeptic’s face. The message being that considering comparative approaches and theory about similar problems may indeed be as practical as one can …
Law School Rights: The Establishment Of New York Law School, 1891-1897, James A. Wooten
Law School Rights: The Establishment Of New York Law School, 1891-1897, James A. Wooten
Journal Articles
No abstract provided.
Better Than No Teeth At All?, John Henry Schlegel
Better Than No Teeth At All?, John Henry Schlegel
Journal Articles
No abstract provided.
Just The Facts: The Field Code And The Case Method, William P. Lapiana
Just The Facts: The Field Code And The Case Method, William P. Lapiana
Articles & Chapters
No abstract provided.
The Trouble With Legal Ethics, William H. Simon
The Trouble With Legal Ethics, William H. Simon
Faculty Scholarship
Legal ethics is a disappointing subject. From afar, it seems exciting; it promises to engage the central normative commitments that make lawyering a profession and that account for much of the nonpecuniary appeal of the lawyer's role. Thus, when people see public spirit among lawyers threatened by commercial self-seeking, they often prescribe increased attention to the teaching and -discussion of legal ethics as a remedy.
But close up, legal ethics usually turns out to be dull and dispiriting. At most law schools, students find the course in legal ethics or professional responsibility boring and insubstantial, and faculty dread having to …