Current important events in the U.S. legal profession and legal ethics, with useful research and analysis of the rules and the profession's current status, are explored by Tulane law students from an advanced ethics seminar. The collection is edited by Tulane law professor Steven Alan Childress, and he previews in his Foreword the students' explorations into the big stories of 2011.
Purchase of this book benefits Tulane's Public Interest Law Foundation, a non-profit student group that funds public interest placements and indigent client representations throughout the country.
The timely topics include: false guilty pleas, ethical considerations in making the client's files into a digital record, the capital defense of Jared Lee Loughner, Justice Scalia's seminar sponsored by conservative congressmembers and the Tea Party, sensitivity to "cultural competence," prosecutorial relationships with key witnesses, bar discipline for behavior outside the practice of law, legal outsourcing and competition, the dilemma of student debt in a slowed legal economy, the practice of law by legal websites like LegalZoom, negotiation ethics, hybridized MDL settlements, and the advocate-witness rule.
The authors' topics, opinions, and writing--not bogged down with heavy jargon--are accessible to a wide audience interested in the state of the profession, and not just lawyers, professors, or law students.
1108479687
Purchase of this book benefits Tulane's Public Interest Law Foundation, a non-profit student group that funds public interest placements and indigent client representations throughout the country.
The timely topics include: false guilty pleas, ethical considerations in making the client's files into a digital record, the capital defense of Jared Lee Loughner, Justice Scalia's seminar sponsored by conservative congressmembers and the Tea Party, sensitivity to "cultural competence," prosecutorial relationships with key witnesses, bar discipline for behavior outside the practice of law, legal outsourcing and competition, the dilemma of student debt in a slowed legal economy, the practice of law by legal websites like LegalZoom, negotiation ethics, hybridized MDL settlements, and the advocate-witness rule.
The authors' topics, opinions, and writing--not bogged down with heavy jargon--are accessible to a wide audience interested in the state of the profession, and not just lawyers, professors, or law students.
Hot Topics in the Legal Profession - 2012
Current important events in the U.S. legal profession and legal ethics, with useful research and analysis of the rules and the profession's current status, are explored by Tulane law students from an advanced ethics seminar. The collection is edited by Tulane law professor Steven Alan Childress, and he previews in his Foreword the students' explorations into the big stories of 2011.
Purchase of this book benefits Tulane's Public Interest Law Foundation, a non-profit student group that funds public interest placements and indigent client representations throughout the country.
The timely topics include: false guilty pleas, ethical considerations in making the client's files into a digital record, the capital defense of Jared Lee Loughner, Justice Scalia's seminar sponsored by conservative congressmembers and the Tea Party, sensitivity to "cultural competence," prosecutorial relationships with key witnesses, bar discipline for behavior outside the practice of law, legal outsourcing and competition, the dilemma of student debt in a slowed legal economy, the practice of law by legal websites like LegalZoom, negotiation ethics, hybridized MDL settlements, and the advocate-witness rule.
The authors' topics, opinions, and writing--not bogged down with heavy jargon--are accessible to a wide audience interested in the state of the profession, and not just lawyers, professors, or law students.
Purchase of this book benefits Tulane's Public Interest Law Foundation, a non-profit student group that funds public interest placements and indigent client representations throughout the country.
The timely topics include: false guilty pleas, ethical considerations in making the client's files into a digital record, the capital defense of Jared Lee Loughner, Justice Scalia's seminar sponsored by conservative congressmembers and the Tea Party, sensitivity to "cultural competence," prosecutorial relationships with key witnesses, bar discipline for behavior outside the practice of law, legal outsourcing and competition, the dilemma of student debt in a slowed legal economy, the practice of law by legal websites like LegalZoom, negotiation ethics, hybridized MDL settlements, and the advocate-witness rule.
The authors' topics, opinions, and writing--not bogged down with heavy jargon--are accessible to a wide audience interested in the state of the profession, and not just lawyers, professors, or law students.
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Hot Topics in the Legal Profession - 2012
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Hot Topics in the Legal Profession - 2012
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Product Details
BN ID: | 2940014072281 |
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Publisher: | Quid Pro, LLC |
Publication date: | 01/29/2012 |
Series: | Benefit Tulane PILF Series |
Sold by: | Barnes & Noble |
Format: | eBook |
Pages: | 256 |
File size: | 473 KB |
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