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Articles 1 - 30 of 62
Full-Text Articles in Law
A Tribute To William H. Bowen: Tributes And Response To Words Of Congratulations, Charles W. Goldner Jr., J. Thomas May, Rodney K. Smith, Thomas F. Mclarty, Derrick Smith, William Jefferson Clinton, William H. Bowen
A Tribute To William H. Bowen: Tributes And Response To Words Of Congratulations, Charles W. Goldner Jr., J. Thomas May, Rodney K. Smith, Thomas F. Mclarty, Derrick Smith, William Jefferson Clinton, William H. Bowen
University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review
No abstract provided.
Independent Paralegals Can Fill The Gap In Unmet Legal Services For The Low-Income Community, Thais E. Mootz
Independent Paralegals Can Fill The Gap In Unmet Legal Services For The Low-Income Community, Thais E. Mootz
University of the District of Columbia Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Technologically Enabled Legal Services Delivery System From The Perspective Of Senior Management, John A. Tull
The Technologically Enabled Legal Services Delivery System From The Perspective Of Senior Management, John A. Tull
University of the District of Columbia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Technology Assisted Advocacy, Julia R. Gordon
Technology Assisted Advocacy, Julia R. Gordon
University of the District of Columbia Law Review
This paper creates a technology assisted advocacy scenario. It follows the events in the client access scenario paper by Mike Genz, taking the client Maria into a case requiring the full services of an advocate. Each step in the scenario is followed by a discussion that explores some of the work that would need to be done to make this scenario a reality.
Legal Services Attorneys As Partners In Community Economic Development: Creating Wealth For Poor Communities Through Cooperative Economics, Laurie A. Morin
Legal Services Attorneys As Partners In Community Economic Development: Creating Wealth For Poor Communities Through Cooperative Economics, Laurie A. Morin
University of the District of Columbia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Co-Producing Justice: The New Imperative, Edgar S. Cahn
Co-Producing Justice: The New Imperative, Edgar S. Cahn
University of the District of Columbia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Mapping A Labyrinth To Justice: Lessons And Insights From Innovative Legal Services Delivery Methodologies Implemented In The District Of Columbia, Jan A, May
University of the District of Columbia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Legal Needs For The Low-Income Population In Washington, Dc, Lynn E. Cunningham
Legal Needs For The Low-Income Population In Washington, Dc, Lynn E. Cunningham
University of the District of Columbia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Technology And Client Community Access To Legal Services - Suggestive Scenarios On Community Legal Education, Intake And Referral And Pro Se, Michael Genz
University of the District of Columbia Law Review
The papers prepared for the Conference provide a broad perspective on emerging technologies and the potential they offer Legal Services. This paper, building on those perspectives, first offers a real world scenario showing how these technologies might be deployed to maximize client and community access to Legal Services resources. For each scenario, the paper then lays out what needs to be in place - technologically, managerially and institutionally, for the scenario to be made real.
Dc Consortium Of Legal Service Providers: Legal Services 2000 Symposium. April 30, 1999. Remarks Of Peter Edelman, Zona Hostetler, And Ada Shen-Jaffe, Peter Edelman, Zona Hostetler, Ada Shen-Jaffe
Dc Consortium Of Legal Service Providers: Legal Services 2000 Symposium. April 30, 1999. Remarks Of Peter Edelman, Zona Hostetler, And Ada Shen-Jaffe, Peter Edelman, Zona Hostetler, Ada Shen-Jaffe
University of the District of Columbia Law Review
No abstract provided.
Ub's Women In Law: Overcoming Barriers During Their First Hundred Years, Marjorie L. Girth
Ub's Women In Law: Overcoming Barriers During Their First Hundred Years, Marjorie L. Girth
Buffalo Women's Law Journal
No abstract provided.
A Cause Worth Quitting For? The Conflict Between Professional Ethics And Individual Rights In Discriminatory Treatment Of Corporate Counsel, Rachel S. Arnow Richman
A Cause Worth Quitting For? The Conflict Between Professional Ethics And Individual Rights In Discriminatory Treatment Of Corporate Counsel, Rachel S. Arnow Richman
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Lawyer Communications On The Internet: Beginning The Millennium With Disparate Standards, Louise L. Hill
Lawyer Communications On The Internet: Beginning The Millennium With Disparate Standards, Louise L. Hill
Washington Law Review
Lawyer communications on the Internet constituting commercial speech are subject to state ethics rules governing lawyer advertising and communication. Because each state operates as a separate entity with its own rules that govern the lawyers of its jurisdiction, the profession is faced with disparate standards on a jurisdictional basis. Of the forty-three states that have adopted the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, four-fifths have standards on lawyer communications that vary from those in the Model Rules. Not only is there variation in the rules themselves, but differences exist in the specific applicability and interpretation of these rules to components of …
A Review Of Electronic Court Filing In The United States, Bradley J. Hillis
A Review Of Electronic Court Filing In The United States, Bradley J. Hillis
The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process
The rise of e-commerce has caused many courts to begin filing and storing pleadings electronically. This article discusses e-filing software, the benefits to and development of extensible mark-up language (“XML”) for legal documents, and the impact the future of e-filing.
Poor Canadian Legal Education: So Near To Wall Street, So Far From God, Harry W. Arthurs
Poor Canadian Legal Education: So Near To Wall Street, So Far From God, Harry W. Arthurs
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
The recent appearance of recruiters from Wall Street firms at several Canadian law schools, and the recent hiring by American law schools of several mid-career Canadian law professors, has created a "moral panic" as journalists, academics and law firms have expressed great concern over the loss of Canada's "best and brightest" to the United States. Properly understood as part of a larger debate about globalization and regional economic integration, these developments are less important in themselves than for what they reveal about the present and future of the Canadian state, and the Canadian business community, legal profession and universities.
Ready Or Not, Here They Come: Why The Aba Should Amend The Model Rules To Accommodate Multidisciplinary Practices, Bradley G. Johnson
Ready Or Not, Here They Come: Why The Aba Should Amend The Model Rules To Accommodate Multidisciplinary Practices, Bradley G. Johnson
Washington and Lee Law Review
No abstract provided.
Foreword: The Question Of Process, J. Harvie Wilkinson Iii
Foreword: The Question Of Process, J. Harvie Wilkinson Iii
Michigan Law Review
Many in the legal profession have abandoned the great questions of legal process. This is too bad. How a decision is reached can be as important as what the decision is. In an increasingly diverse country with many competing visions of the good, it is critical for law to aspire to agreement on process - a task both more achievable than agreement on substance and more suited to our profession than waving the banners of ideological truth. By process, I mean the institutional routes by which we in America reach our most crucial decisions. In other words, process is our …
Zen And The Art Of Jursiprudence, Matthew K. Roskoski
Zen And The Art Of Jursiprudence, Matthew K. Roskoski
Michigan Law Review
Lawyer bashing is by no means a remarkable phenomenon. It was not remarkable when Shakespeare wrote, "[t]he first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers," and it's not remarkable today. Paul Campos, however, has written a particularly readable example, blending venerable Western lawyer-bashing and pop psychology with unsystematic invocations of Eastern religion. Jurismania is named after Campos's theory that the American legal system has a lot in common with a person suffering from an obsessive-compulsive disorder, an addiction to law that does neither the patient nor those around him much good. In Jurismania, Campos criticizes our insistence on regulating …
In Memoriam: Rafael C. Benitez, Keith S. Rosenn
In Memoriam: Rafael C. Benitez, Keith S. Rosenn
University of Miami Inter-American Law Review
No abstract provided.
In Memoriam: Rafael C. Benitez, Burton A. Landy
In Memoriam: Rafael C. Benitez, Burton A. Landy
University of Miami Inter-American Law Review
No abstract provided.
In Memoriam: Rafael C. Benitez, Richard A. Hausler
In Memoriam: Rafael C. Benitez, Richard A. Hausler
University of Miami Inter-American Law Review
No abstract provided.
In Memoriam: Rafael C. Benitez, Carl E.B. Mckenry Jr.
In Memoriam: Rafael C. Benitez, Carl E.B. Mckenry Jr.
University of Miami Inter-American Law Review
No abstract provided.
In Memoriam: Rafael C. Benitez, Cami Green
In Memoriam: Rafael C. Benitez, Cami Green
University of Miami Inter-American Law Review
No abstract provided.
Inter-America Bar Association: Resolutions Of The Xxxv Conference
Inter-America Bar Association: Resolutions Of The Xxxv Conference
University of Miami Inter-American Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Price Of Law: How The Market For Lawyers Distorts The Justice System, Gillian K. Hadfield
The Price Of Law: How The Market For Lawyers Distorts The Justice System, Gillian K. Hadfield
Michigan Law Review
Bill Clinton's legal bills in connection with the Lewinsky scandal topped $10 million; the bill for Ken Starr's investigation of the President exceeded $50 million. The cost to the eight families portrayed in the bestseller A Civil Action for their tort suit against a manufacturing company accused of dumping hazardous chemicals into the water supply was $4.8 million (paid from a settlement of about $8 million); the cost for the defense exceeded $7 million. Lawyers who represented the three states in the nationwide suit by state attorneys general against tobacco companies to recoup smoking-related health care costs were awarded $8.2 …
Tentative Program For Mid-Winter Meeting Of Indiana State Bar Association At Claypool Hotel, Indianapolis, On Friday, January 19th 10:00 O'Clock A.M.
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Dna As Evidence: Viewing Science Through The Prism Of The Law, Peter Donnelly, Richard D. Friedman
Dna As Evidence: Viewing Science Through The Prism Of The Law, Peter Donnelly, Richard D. Friedman
Law Quadrangle (formerly Law Quad Notes)
DNA evidence has transformed the proof of identity in criminal litigation, but it has also introduced daunting problems of statistical analysis into the process. In this article, we analyze a problem related to DNA evidence that is likely to be of great and increasing significance in the near future. This is the problem of whether, and how, to present evidence that the suspect has been identified through a DNA database search. The following article is adapted from "DNA Database Searches and the Legal Consumption of Scientific Evidence," 97.4 Michigan Law Review 931-984 (1999), and appears here with permission of the …
Uncoupling The Law Of Takings, Michael A. Heller, James E. Krier
Uncoupling The Law Of Takings, Michael A. Heller, James E. Krier
Law Quadrangle (formerly Law Quad Notes)
The following article is based on "Deterrence and Distribution in the Law of Takings," 112 Harvard Law Review 997-1025 (March 1999), © 1999 by the Harvard Law Review Association, and appears here by permission. A complete version, with citations, is available from the authors or the editor of Law Quadrangle Notes.
The law of takings couples together matters that should be treated independently. Whatever the boundaries of the the Takings Clause, we think there is much to be gained by analyzing takings in terms of the clause's underlying purposes, and by understanding that efficiency and justice are best served by …