Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 31 - 45 of 45

Full-Text Articles in Law

Corporate-Family Conflicts, Charles W. Wolfram Jan 1999

Corporate-Family Conflicts, Charles W. Wolfram

Journal of the Institute for the Study of Legal Ethics

No abstract provided.


Should The Government Fund Legal Services - If So, What Should The Lawyers Do, Jonathan A. Weiss Jan 1999

Should The Government Fund Legal Services - If So, What Should The Lawyers Do, Jonathan A. Weiss

Journal of the Institute for the Study of Legal Ethics

No abstract provided.


An Informal Discussion On Legal Ethics, Charles W. Wolfram, Ronald D. Rotunda, Burnele V. Powell, Carol M. Langford, Roy Simon Jan 1999

An Informal Discussion On Legal Ethics, Charles W. Wolfram, Ronald D. Rotunda, Burnele V. Powell, Carol M. Langford, Roy Simon

Journal of the Institute for the Study of Legal Ethics

No abstract provided.


Response To Should The Government Fund Legal Services - If So, What Should The Lawyers Do, Michael Horowitz Jan 1999

Response To Should The Government Fund Legal Services - If So, What Should The Lawyers Do, Michael Horowitz

Journal of the Institute for the Study of Legal Ethics

No abstract provided.


Towering Figures, Enigmas, And Responsive Communities In American Legal Ethics, Thomas L. Shaffer Jan 1999

Towering Figures, Enigmas, And Responsive Communities In American Legal Ethics, Thomas L. Shaffer

Journal Articles

The first thing Niebuhr and Guttman are telling us to do is to look around and figure out what is going on around us. With that in mind, it has seemed to me that, at the simplest, a lawyer (or a journalist) functions in at least four communities, any one of which might be a community to talk about lawyers' moral questions in.

My inquiry, then, is an inquiry in communitarian legal ethics, using a Guttman-Niebuhr focus on responsibility. I infer a further question about communities of moral discernment—that is, not only where a modern lawyer is responsible but also …


Limiting Secret Settlements By Law, David Luban Jan 1999

Limiting Secret Settlements By Law, David Luban

Journal of the Institute for the Study of Legal Ethics

No abstract provided.


After Legal Aid Is Abolished, Geoffrey C. Hazard Jr. Jan 1999

After Legal Aid Is Abolished, Geoffrey C. Hazard Jr.

Journal of the Institute for the Study of Legal Ethics

No abstract provided.


1998 Survey Of Ethics In Land-Use Planning, Patricia E. Salkin Jan 1999

1998 Survey Of Ethics In Land-Use Planning, Patricia E. Salkin

Scholarly Works

No abstract provided.


Informal Debate Between Michael Horowitz And Jonathan A. Weiss On Funding Legal Services, Michael Horowitz, Jonathan A. Weiss Jan 1999

Informal Debate Between Michael Horowitz And Jonathan A. Weiss On Funding Legal Services, Michael Horowitz, Jonathan A. Weiss

Journal of the Institute for the Study of Legal Ethics

No abstract provided.


Cautionary Tale From The Multidisciplinary Practice Debate: How The Traditionalists Lost Professionalism, A The Phyllis W. Beck Chair In Law Symposium: New Roles, No Rules - Redefining Lawyers' Work - Redefining Lawyers' Work: Multidisciplinary Practice, Russell G. Pearce, Amelia J. Uelmen: Jan 1999

Cautionary Tale From The Multidisciplinary Practice Debate: How The Traditionalists Lost Professionalism, A The Phyllis W. Beck Chair In Law Symposium: New Roles, No Rules - Redefining Lawyers' Work - Redefining Lawyers' Work: Multidisciplinary Practice, Russell G. Pearce, Amelia J. Uelmen:

Faculty Scholarship

The author presents a fictional conversation among Lawrence J. Fox, other noted legal scholars, and himself concerning the ethics and changes in the legal profession.


Renewed Introspection And The Legal Profession, Eugene R. Gaetke Jan 1999

Renewed Introspection And The Legal Profession, Eugene R. Gaetke

Law Faculty Scholarly Articles

As the twentieth century draws to a close, the legal profession again immersed in a process of self-assessment, reflection, and reform. Operating on several fronts, various constituent elements of the bar have recently completed or have underway significant projects relating to the law of lawyering.

Two efforts stand out in particular. For more than a decade, the American Law Institute has labored in the production of a new Restatement of the Law Governing Lawyers, and the organization stands now on the brink of that monumental work's publication. Equally significant, the American Bar Association has again undertaken a comprehensive review of …


Rethinking The Way Law Is Taught: Can We Improve Lawyer Professionalism By Teaching Hired Guns To Aim Better?, W. William Hodges Jan 1999

Rethinking The Way Law Is Taught: Can We Improve Lawyer Professionalism By Teaching Hired Guns To Aim Better?, W. William Hodges

Kentucky Law Journal

No abstract provided.


The Lawyer's Duty To Disclose Material Facts In Contract Or Settlement Negotiations, Nathan M. Crystal Jan 1999

The Lawyer's Duty To Disclose Material Facts In Contract Or Settlement Negotiations, Nathan M. Crystal

Kentucky Law Journal

No abstract provided.


What Is The Common Good, And Why Does It Concern The Client's Lawyer?, John M. Finnis Jan 1999

What Is The Common Good, And Why Does It Concern The Client's Lawyer?, John M. Finnis

Journal Articles

Why is anything of real concern to any of us? Because, besides our simply emotional motives, we have reasons for action (which may be supported or opposed by our emotions). What are reasons for action? Some are instrumental, means to further ends: I have reason to start reading this paper to you, and you had reason to come back into the room to hear it. What reasons? Well, doing so is my contribution to this symposium's reflection on its subject-matter. That reflection, in turn, is intended to be instrumental in promoting a wider and deeper understanding of an important set …


A Primer On Mdps: Should The 'No' Rule Become A New Rule, Laurel S. Terry Dec 1998

A Primer On Mdps: Should The 'No' Rule Become A New Rule, Laurel S. Terry

Laurel S. Terry

This article is the second of four major articles or book chapters that I have written about MDPs. "MDPs" refers to multidisciplinary partnerships or multidisciplinary practices between lawyers and nonlawyers. Prior to 1998, virtually all U.S. states had lawyer discipline rules that prohibited a lawyer from sharing legal fees with a nonlawyer or practicing law in partnership with a nonlawyer. In 1998, however, the American Bar Association created a Commission on Multidisciplinary Practice to reconsider these rules. One impetus for the creation of this Commission was the increasingly large numbers of lawyers who were working for the Big 5 Accounting …