Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
- Keyword
-
- Appointed counsel (1)
- Bias (1)
- Caseloads (1)
- Clients (1)
- Convictions (1)
-
- Criminal justice (1)
- Curriculum (1)
- Decision making (1)
- Defendants (1)
- Discourse (1)
- Formalism (1)
- Gideon v. Wainwright (1)
- Habeas corpus (1)
- Habeas review (1)
- Innocence (1)
- International business transactions (1)
- Language (1)
- Law professors (1)
- Law reform (1)
- Law school clinics (1)
- Law schools (1)
- Law students (1)
- Legal practice (1)
- Legal reasoning (1)
- Low income individuals (1)
- Postconviction challenges (1)
- Poverty (1)
- Prisoners (1)
- Probability (1)
- Publication
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Legal Profession
An Old-Fashioned View Of The Nature Of Law, James Boyd White
An Old-Fashioned View Of The Nature Of Law, James Boyd White
Articles
The law is a not an abstract system or scheme of rules, as we often speak of it, but an inherently unstable structure of thought and expression. It is built upon a distinct set of dynamic and dialogic tensions, which include: tensions between ordinary language and legal language; between legal language and the specialized discourses of other fields; between language itself and the mute world that lies beneath it; between opposing lawyers; between conflicting but justifiable ways of giving meaning to the rules and principles of law; between substantive and procedural lines of thought; between law and justice; between the …
Legal Reasoning And Scientific Reasoning, Phoebe C. Ellsworth
Legal Reasoning And Scientific Reasoning, Phoebe C. Ellsworth
Articles
In my presentation for the 2010 Meador Lectures on Rationality, I chose to compare legal reasoning and scientific reasoning. Both law and science pride themselves on the rationality of their intellectual methods and believe that those methods are designed to analyze questions and reach the correct conclusions by means of reason, free from cognitive or emotional biases. Of course, both law and science often fall short of this ideal at all levels, from the decisions about individual legal cases or scientific studies to the acceptance of general theories. In many ways, the biases that mislead legal and scientific thinkers are …
Teaching Transactional Skills And Law In An International Context, Deborah Burand, Kojo Yelpaala, Peter Linzer
Teaching Transactional Skills And Law In An International Context, Deborah Burand, Kojo Yelpaala, Peter Linzer
Other Publications
Today, we are going to be discussing how we think about transactional skills in an international context. It doesn't surprise me that this is a smaller group. This is a subspecialty, but let me just do a very quick survey of you. How many of you now in this room are teaching an international course? And what are you doing?
The Illusory Right To Counsel, Eve Brensike Primus
The Illusory Right To Counsel, Eve Brensike Primus
Articles
Imagine a woman wrongly accused of murdering her fianc6. She is arrested and charged with first-degree murder. If convicted, she faces a mandatory sentence of life without the possibility of parole. Her family scrapes together enough money to hire two attorneys to represent her at trial. There is no physical evidence connecting her to the murder, but the prosecution builds its case on circumstantial inferences. Her trial attorneys admit that they were so cocky and confident that she would be acquitted that they did not bother to investigate her case or file a single pre-trial motion. Rather, they waived the …