Hofstra Law Review
Volume 34, Issue 3 (2006)
Front Matter
Legal Ethics Symposium: Lawyers' Ethics in an Adversary System
Legal Ethics in an Adversary System: The Persistent Questions
Deborah L. Rhode
The Triage Trilemma
Steven Lubet
A Cautionary Tale: Fiduciary Breach as Legal Malpractice
Charles W. Wolfram
Legal Ethics and the Constitution
Alan Dershowitz
In Praise of Overzealous Representation - Lying to Judges, Deceiving Third Parties, and Other Ethical Conduct
Monroe H. Freedman
A Grand Slam of Professional Irresponsibility and Judicial Disregard
Stephen A. Saltzburg
Monroe Freedman's Solution to the Criminal Defense Lawyer's Trilemma Is Wrong as a Matter of Policy and Constitutional Law
Stephen Gillers
Reconsidering the Corporate Attorney-Client Privilege: A Response to the Compelled-Voluntary Waiver Paradox
Lonnie T. Brown Jr.
The Corporate Lawyer and 'The Perjury Trilemma'
Thomas D. Morgan
Institutional and Individual Justification in Legal Ethics: The Problem of Client Selection
W. Bradley Wendel
Counseling Organizational Clients"Within the Bounds of the Law"
Roger C. Cramton
Secret Evidence Is Slowly Eroding the Adversary System: CIPA and FISA in the Courts
Ellen Yaroshefsky
Do Bar Association Ethics Committees Serve the Public or the Profession? An Argument for Process Change
Hon. David G. Trager
The Zeal Shortage
Anita Bernstein
Ideas
The Supreme Court Will Not Overrule Roe v. Wade
Robert A. Sedler
Notes
An Old Means to a Different End: The War on Terror, American Citizens... and the Treason Clause
Benjamin A. Lewis
Big Talk, Broken Promises: How Title I of the Americans with Disabilities Act Failed Disabled Workers
Melanie D. Winegar