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Full-Text Articles in Law
Statement On The Functions And Future Of Appellate Lawyers, The American Academy Of Appellate Lawyers
Statement On The Functions And Future Of Appellate Lawyers, The American Academy Of Appellate Lawyers
The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process
No abstract provided.
Effects Of Alternative Types Of Counsel On Criminal Procedure Treatment, Stuart S. Nagel
Effects Of Alternative Types Of Counsel On Criminal Procedure Treatment, Stuart S. Nagel
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Lawyer's Response To The Demand For Both Stability And Change Through Law, Orison S. Marden
The Lawyer's Response To The Demand For Both Stability And Change Through Law, Orison S. Marden
Vanderbilt Law Review
We need not worry about the lawyer's response to the need for stability in the law. The average lawyer is a conservative chap who does not favor change unless the need for it has been proved to the hilt.Nor need we tender full apologies for this hardheaded attitude, for,as Judge Cardozo once said, "certainty and uniformity are gains not lightly to be sacrificed. Above all is this true when honest men have shaped their conduct upon the faith of the pronouncement." At times, however, we have allowed these considerations, important as they are, to outweigh even more compelling reasons for …
Streamlined Justice In Virginia, Kennon C. Whittle
Streamlined Justice In Virginia, Kennon C. Whittle
Washington and Lee Law Review
No abstract provided.
Vanderbilt: Cases And Materials On Modern Procedure And Judicial Administration, Charles W. Joiner
Vanderbilt: Cases And Materials On Modern Procedure And Judicial Administration, Charles W. Joiner
Michigan Law Review
A Review of CASES AND MATERIALS ON MODERN PROCEDURE AND JUDICIAL ADMINISTRATION by Arthur T. Vanderbilt.
The Lawyer's Role In Defense Of Justice And Democracy
The Lawyer's Role In Defense Of Justice And Democracy
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
The Law And Justice, Charles A. Kent
The Law And Justice, Charles A. Kent
Michigan Law Review
Here is often complaint that the decisions of the courts are unjust. Probably such complaints have always existed, and they may be no greater to-day than usual. Often, perhaps usually, defeated suitors feel that they have suffered injjustice. There is a public feeling that the rules of law produce much delay in criminal cases, that convictions are set aside by the higher courts for what seem trivial reasons, and that often in consequence the guilty escape. Civil cases do not attract so much public attention, but perhaps there is as great cause of complaint in the repeated trials, rendered necessary …