Vol. 40 No. 1, November 2012
Index
- The Law: Business or Profession? The Continuing Relevance of Julius Henry Cohen for the Practice of Law in the Twenty-First Century: foreword.
- A history of professionalism: Julius Henry Cohen and the professions as a route to citizenship.
- 'Professionalism' as pathology: the ABA's latest policy debate on nonlawyer ownership of law practice entities.
- 'Professionalism' as pathology: the ABA's latest policy debate on nonlawyer ownership of law practice entities.
- Rehabilitating lawyers: perceptions of deviance and its cures in the lawyer reinstatement process.
- Law as a profession: examining the role of accountability.
- Implications of globalization for the professional status of lawyers in the United States and elsewhere.
- Profession: a definition.
- Dichotomy no longer? The role of the private business sector in educating the future Russian legal professions.
- The framing effects of professionalism: is there a lawyer cast of mind? Lessons from compliance programs.
- The framing effects of professionalism: is there a lawyer cast of mind? Lessons from compliance programs.
- Resisting commercialism.
- An entrepreneurial perspective on the business of being in our profession.
- The practice of law as a useful art: toward an alternative theory of professionalism.
- In defense of the business of law.
- Nothing new under the sun: how the legal profession's twenty-first century challenges resemble those of the turn of the twentieth century.
- People's electric: engaged legal education at Rutgers-Newark Law School in the 1960s and 1970s.
- 'It takes a lot to get into Bellevue': a pro-rights critique of New York's involuntary commitment law.