Lawyers and Justice: An Ethical Study

Cover
Princeton University Press, 21.12.1988 - 440 Seiten

The law, Holmes said, is no brooding omnipresence in the sky. "If that is true," writes David Luban, "it is because we encounter the legal system in the form of flesh-and-blood human beings: the police if we are unlucky, but for the (marginally) luckier majority, the lawyers." For practical purposes, the lawyers are the law. In this comprehensive study of legal ethics, Luban examines the conflict between common morality and the lawyer's "role morality" under the adversary system and how this conflict becomes a social and political problem for a community.


Using real examples and drawing extensively on case law, he develops a systematic philosophical treatment of the problem of role morality in legal practice. He then applies the argument to the problem of confidentiality, outlines an affordable system of legal services for the poor, and provides an in-depth philosophical treatment of ethical problems in public interest law.

 

Inhalt

THE CASE OF THE WICKED UNCLE
3
LAWYERS AGAINST THE LAW
11
THE MORAL AUTHORITY OF LAW
31
ENTER THE ADVERSARY SYSTEM 50
50
WHY HAVE AN ADVERSARY SYSTEM?
67
THE STRUCTURE OF ROLE MORALITY
128
THE OPPORTUNITY IN THE LAW
148
CLIENT CONFIDENCES AND HUMAN DIGNITY
177
SOME MODEST PROPOSALS
267
THE ATTACK ON LEGAL SERVICES
293
DIRTY HANDS
317
CLASS CONFLICTS
341
THE OBJECTION FROM DEMOCRACY
358
HOW STANDARD IS
393
AN ARGUMENT AGAINST
405
BIBLIOGRAPHY
413

CORPORATE COUNSEL AND CONFIDENTIALITY
206
THE RIGHT TO LEGAL SERVICES
237

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