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Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Law

A Tribute To Professor Dan Markel, Keith L. Savino Oct 2014

A Tribute To Professor Dan Markel, Keith L. Savino

Florida State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Dan Markel's Premature Death Cements His Uncompromising Legacy, Ryan Wechsler Oct 2014

Dan Markel's Premature Death Cements His Uncompromising Legacy, Ryan Wechsler

Florida State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Losing Friends, Garrick Pursley Oct 2014

Losing Friends, Garrick Pursley

Florida State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Cost Of Avoidance: Pluralism, Neutrality, And The Foundations Of Modern Legal Ethics, Melissa Mortazavi Oct 2014

The Cost Of Avoidance: Pluralism, Neutrality, And The Foundations Of Modern Legal Ethics, Melissa Mortazavi

Florida State University Law Review

This Article offers an answer to key questions in modern American legal ethics: when and why did the legal profession stop talking about professional conduct in moral terms? Mining the history of current rules governing lawyer conduct, this Article reveals that while the 1969 Model Code of Professional Responsibility sought to revolutionize legal ethics by creating a professional code that was more transparent, democratized, and less hierarchical than the preceding 1908 Canons of Legal Ethics, that effort also excised a moral understanding of lawyering in order to facilitate a particular understanding of pluralism.

The drafters of the 1969 Model Code …


What's New About The New Normal: The Evolving Market For New Lawyers In The 21st Century, Bernard A. Burk Apr 2014

What's New About The New Normal: The Evolving Market For New Lawyers In The 21st Century, Bernard A. Burk

Florida State University Law Review

Everyone agrees that job prospects for many new law graduates have been poor for the last several years; there is rather less consensus on whether, when, how, or why that may change as the economy recovers from the Great Recession. This Article analyzes historical and current trends in the job market for new lawyers in an effort to predict how that market may evolve.

The Article derives quantitative measurements of the proportion of law graduates over the last thirty years who have obtained initial employment for which law school serves as rational substantive preparation (“Law Jobs”). In comparing entry-level hiring …