Lawyers in Practice
Ethical Decision Making in Context
Lawyers in Practice
Ethical Decision Making in Context
How do lawyers resolve ethical dilemmas in the everyday context of their practice? What are the issues that commonly arise, and how do lawyers determine the best ways to resolve them? Until recently, efforts to answer these questions have focused primarily on rules and legal doctrine rather than the real-life situations lawyers face in legal practice.
The first book to present empirical research on ethical decision making in a variety of practice contexts, including corporate litigation, securities, immigration, and divorce law, Lawyers in Practice fills a substantial gap in the existing literature. Following an introduction emphasizing the increasing importance of understanding context in the legal profession, contributions focus on ethical dilemmas ranging from relatively narrow ethical issues to broader problems of professionalism, including the prosecutor’s obligation to disclose evidence, the management of conflicts of interest, and loyalty to clients and the court. Each chapter details the resolution of a dilemma from the practitioner’s point of view that is, in turn, set within a particular community of practice. Timely and practical, this book should be required reading for law students as well as students and scholars of law and society.
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392 pages | 2 line drawings, 2 tables | 6 x 9 | © 2012
Chicago Series in Law and Society
Law and Legal Studies: General Legal Studies, Law and Society
Sociology: Occupations, Professions, Work
Reviews
Table of Contents
Preface
Contributors
Part I. Introductory Perspectives on Ethics in Context
Chapter 1 Why Context Matters
Lynn Mather and Leslie C. Levin
Chapter 2 Some Realism about Legal Realism for Lawyers: Assessing the Role of Context in Legal Ethics
David B. Wilkins
Chapter 3 Whose Ethics? The Benchmark Problem in Legal Ethics Research
Elizabeth Chambliss
Part II. Decision Making in Communities of Legal Practice
Family and Immigration
Chapter 4 Client Grievances and Lawyer Conduct: The Challenges of Divorce Practice
Lynn Mather and Craig A. McEwen
Chapter 5 Immigration Lawyers and the Lying Client
Leslie C. Levin
Personal Injury
Chapter 6 Plaintiffs’ Lawyers and the Tension between Professional Norms and the Need to Generate Business
Stephen Daniels and Joanne Martin
Chapter 7 Betwixt and Between: The Ethical Dilemmas of Insurance Defense
Herbert M. Kritzer
Corporate Settings
Chapter 8 The Ethics of Constructing Truth: The Corporate Litigator’s Approach
Kimberly Kirkland
Chapter 9 Transnational Lawyering: Clients, Ethics, and Regulation
John Flood
Chapter 10 The Ethics of In-House Practice
Sung Hui Kim
Corporate Specialties
Chapter 11 The Ethical Lives of Securities Lawyers
Patrick Schmidt
Chapter 12 Scientists at the Bar: The Professional World of Patent Lawyers
John M. Conley and Lynn Mather
Criminal Law
Chapter 13 Prosecutors’ Ethics in Context: Influences on Prosecutorial Disclosure
Ellen Yaroshefsky and Bruce A. Green
Chapter 14 Reinterpreting the Zealous Advocate: Multiple Intermediary Roles of the Criminal Defense Attorney
Nicole Martorano Van Cleve
Public Interest Lawyers
Chapter 15 Legal Services Lawyers: When Conceptions of Lawyering and Values Clash
Corey S. Shdaimah
Chapter 16 The Accountability Problem in Public Interest Practice: Old Paradigms and New Directions
Scott L. Cummings
Epilogue
Index
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