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Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility

Fordham Law School

Faculty Scholarship

Series

Code of Professional Responsibility

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Rediscovering The Republican Origins Of The Legal Ethics Codes, Russell G. Pearce Jan 1992

Rediscovering The Republican Origins Of The Legal Ethics Codes, Russell G. Pearce

Faculty Scholarship

Many commentators wrongly assume that the hired gun ideal is the foundation of our legal ethics codes. This article explains that this assumption is based on an historical mistake that has consequences for interpreting the modern codes. Judge George Sharswood, the nineteenth century scholar whose work provided the basis for the 1908 A.B.A. Canons of Ethics, had a republican conception that rejected the adversarial ethic in favor of a more nuanced conception that combined loyalty to clients with a thick obligation to the public good that both bounded client representation and required lawyers to provide political leadership. Although the emphasis …


Professional Responsibility Issues In International Law Practice , Roger J. Goebel Jan 1981

Professional Responsibility Issues In International Law Practice , Roger J. Goebel

Faculty Scholarship

The present Code of Professional Responsibility (CPR) is essentially geared to guide the conduct of the lawyer as advocate or litigator. It is certainly of assistance to the American international lawyer in establishing guidelines for his conduct, but only of limited assistance since the international lawyer usually serves more as an advisor to, or negotiator for, his clients. In contrast, the recent ABA draft Model Rules of Professional Conduct (MRPC) provide a more useful basis for examination of the international lawyer's ethical responsibilities, as they do in many respects for the corporate or commercial lawyer who assists domestic clients in …