Journal of the Institute for the Study of Legal Ethics
Current Volume: Volume 2 (1999)
Corporate Law Firms and Corporate Ethics
Ralph Nader
Partners without Power - A Preliminary Look at Black Partners in Corporate Law Firms
David B. Wilkins
The Adversary Process is Not an End in Itself
Lloyd L. Weinreb
Some Thoughts on the Differences in Criminal Trials in the Civil and Common Law Legal Systems
Mary C. Daly
Informal Remarks on Professionalism
Burnele V. Powell
Professionalism
Anthony T. Kronman
Pragmatic Professionalism: An Exercise in Applied Ethics
Amy R. Mashburn
Comments on Professionalism
John M. Walker Jr.
Limiting Secret Settlements by Law
David Luban
Can a Good Lawyer Be a Bad Person
Stephen Gillers
The Good Person Question: Valid Query or Hobson's Choice
Raymond M. Brown
Lawyer Disclosure to Prevent Death or Bodily Injury: A New Look at Spaulding v. Zimmerman
Roger C. Cramton
Reflections on Confidentiality - A Practitioner's Response to Spaulding v. Zimmerman
Carol M. Langford
Rationing Justice - What Thomas More Would Say
Michael E. Tigar
Effective Assistance: Reconceiving the Role of the Chief Public Defender
Kim Taylor-Thompson
Plaintiffs' Class Action Attorneys Earn What They Get
Patricia M. Hynes
Access to What
Stephen L. Pepper
Corporate-Family Conflicts
Charles W. Wolfram
After Legal Aid is Abolished
Geoffrey C. Hazard Jr.
Comments on After Legal Aid is Abolished
Frank Rosiny
When is a Social Worker as Well as a Lawyer Needed
Jack B. Weinstein
Response to Should the Government Fund Legal Services - If So, What Should the Lawyers Do
Michael Horowitz
Informal Debate between Michael Horowitz and Jonathan A. Weiss on Funding Legal Services
Michael Horowitz and Jonathan A. Weiss
An Informal Discussion on Legal Ethics
Charles W. Wolfram, Ronald D. Rotunda, Burnele V. Powell, Carol M. Langford, and Roy Simon