Master Bibliography - Susan Daicoff - updated 03-27-00
Elliott M. Abramson, Puncturing the Myth of the Moral Intractability of Law Students: The Suggestiveness of the Work of Psychologist Lawrence Kohlberg For Ethical Training in Legal Education, 7 Notre Dame J. L., Ethics, & Pub. Pol'y. 223 (1993) (arguing, like Fred Zacharias, that lawyers should not be simply partisan or hired guns, zealous advocates working for the client's interests, to the exclusion of any other values. Instead, Abramson says that lawyers should consider the greater social and public implications of what they do for a client or what is objectively right and wrong, and perhaps at times refuse to take actions that would benefit a client when they transgress these "higher" values.)
Leslie W. Abramson, Law v. Life: What Lawyers Are Afraid to Say About the Legal Profession, 1995, 22 Ohio N. U. L. Rev. 809 (1996).
Paul R. Abramson, Phillip A. Goldberg, & Linda M. Abramson, The Talking Platypus Phenomenon: Competency Ratings as a Function of Sex and Professional Status, 2(2) Psychol. Women Q. 125 (1977).
ABA, Consultants Digest, Vol. VII No. 1, May 1996.
ABA Ethical Dilemmas and Professionalism: A Study Guide for the Video Program.
(Available from the American Bar Association, Special Coordinating Committee on Professionalism, Center for Professional Responsibility, 541 North Fairbanks Court,
Chicago, IL 60611-3314) (1990).
ABA Report of the Professionalism Committee, Teaching and Learning Professionalism (1996).
ABA Spec. Cord. Comm. on Professionalism, Ethical Dilemmas and Professionalism: A Study for the Video Program (1990).
Melanie B. Abbott, Seeking Shelter Under a Deconstructed Roof: Homelessness and Critical Lawyering, 64 Tenn. L. Rev. 269 (1997).
Edward A. Adams, Law Schools Warned of Dip in Quality of Admittees, N.Y. L. J., Dec. 1995, at 1.
Bill Adler, First Kill All The Lawyers: Legal proverbs, Epitaphs, Jokes, and Anecdotes (1994).
Ala. St. B. Disciplinary Comm., Formal Op. 89-91 (1989) citing Law. Man. on Prof. Conduct (ABA/BNA) 339 (Aug. 7, 1989).
Anthony V. Alfieri, Denaturalizing the Lawyer-Statesman, 93 Mich. L. Rev. 1204 (1995).
James J. Alfini & Joseph N. Van Vooren, Is There A Solution to the Problem of Lawyer Stress? The Law School Perspective, 10 J. L. & Health 61 (1995-96).
American Psychiatric Ass'n, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, (4th ed., 1994).
Austin Anderson, Ten Steps to Building Client Relationships and Improving Your Bottom Line (Sept. 27-8, 1996) (unpublished manuscript delivered to Ohio Association of Civil Trial Attorneys Fall Meeting).
Kenneth Anderson, A New Class Of Lawyers: The Therapeutic As Rights Talk, 96 Colum. L. Rev. 1062 (1996).
Walter P. Armstrong, Jr., Professionalism: What Lies Ahead, 30 Tenn. B. J. 12 (1994).
Val J. Arnold, Make Stress Your Ally, Young Law. (Sept. 1997).
Deborah L. Arron, Running From The Law: Why Good Lawyers are Getting Out of The Legal Profession (1989).
Marie Ashe, "Bad Mothers," "Good Lawyers," and "Legal Ethics", 81 Geo. L. J. 2533 (1993).
Marvin E. Aspen, Let Us Be ‘Officers of the Court’ A.B.A. J. (July 1997).
Rob Atkinson, A Dissenter's Commentary on the Professionalism Crusade, 74 Tex. L. Rev. 259 (1995).
Barbara A. Babb, An Interdisciplinary Approach to Family Law Jurisprudence: Application of an Ecological and Therapeutic Perspective, 72 Ind. L. J. 775 (1997).
Walt Bachman, Law v. Life: What Lawyers Are Afraid to Say About the Legal Profession, Fla. B. J., Mar. 1996, at 49 (book review).
Beverly Balos, The Bounds of Professionalism: Challenging Our Students; Challenging Ourselves, 4 Clinical L. Rev. 129 (1997).
Patricia G. Barnes, Cutting Classes, A.B.A. J. (Dec. 1995).
Thomas D. Barton, Troublesome Connections: The Law and Post-Enlightenment Culture, 47 Emory L. J. 163-64 (Winter 1998).
Thomas D. Barton, Therapeutic Jurisprudence and Creative Problem Solving: An Essay on Harnessing Emotion and Human Connection
Robert M. Bastress, Client Centered Counseling and Moral Accountability For Lawyers, 10 J. Legal Prof. 97-99 (1985) (arguing that lawyers need to become more client-centered in the Rogerian sense as well as morally accountable in their representation of clients) and (arguing for lawyering which requires the lawyer to discuss his or her personal morals and beliefs with the client and to refuse to take actions which are inconsistent with these morals and beliefs -- "moral accountability").
Roy F. Baumeister & Leonard S. Newman, Self-Regulation of Cognitive Interference and Decision Processes, 20 Personality and Soc. Psychol. 3 (1994).
Gordon J. Beggs, Reap What You Sow, A.B.A. J., Mar. 1996, at 116.
Walter H. Bennett, Jr., Making Moral Lawyers: A Modest Proposal, 36 Cath. U. L. Rev. 45 (1986).
J.L. Bernard & Carmen S. Jara, The Failure of Clinical Psychology Graduate Students to Apply Understood Ethical Principles, 17 Prof. Psychol. Res. & Prac. 313-315 (1986).
J.L. Bernard, Michael Murphy & Marsha Little, The Failure of Clinical Psychologists to Apply Understood Ethical Principles, 18 Prof. Psychol. Res. & Prac. 489-491 (1987).
J.L. Bernard et al., Dangerous Liaisons, Survey: Most Disapprove of Lawyer-Client Sex, A.B.A. J., Nov. 1992, at 82.
Donald N. Bersoff, Integrating Legal and Psychological Perspectives on the Right to Personal Autonomy, Autonomy for Vulnerable Populations: The Supreme Court's Reckless Disregard for Self-Determination and Social Science, 37 Vill. L. Rev. 1569 (1992).
Jagdeep S. Bhandari et al., Who Are These People? An Empirical Profile of the Nation’s Law School Deans, 48 J. Legal Educ. 3 (1998).
David A. Binder & Susan C. Price, Legal Interviewing and Counseling: A Client-Centered Approach (1977).
Gary Blankenship, Retreat Participants Discuss Ethical Dilemmas, Fla. B. News, Aug. 15, 1995, at 13.
A. Blasi, Bridging Moral Cognition and Moral Action: A Critical Review of the Literature, 88 Psychiatry Bull. 1 (1980).
Gary L. Blasi, What Lawyers Know: Lawyering, Expertise, Cognitive Science, and the Functions of Theory, 45 J. Legal Educ. 313 (1995).
Michael A. Bloom & Carol Lynn Wallinger, Lawyers and Alcoholism: Is it Time for a New Approach?, 61 Temp. L. Rev. 1409 (1988).
Edward R. Blumberg, Preserving and Enhancing the Practice of the Law 71 Fla. B. J. 6 (Aug 1997).
Ward Bower, A Nation Under Lost Lawyers: The Legal Profession at the Close of the Twentieth Century, 100 Dick. L. Rev. 515 (1996).
J. H. Boyd & M.. M. Weisman, Epidemiology of Affective Disorders, 38 Archives Gen. Psychiatry 1039 (1981).
William Braithwaite, Hearts and Minds: Can Professionalism Be Taught?, A.B.A. J., Sept. 1990, at 72-73.
Paul Brest, The Responsibility of Law Schools: Educating Lawyers as Counselors and Problem Solvers, 58 L. & Contemp. Probs. 5 (1995).
Geraldine Reed Brown, Attorney Professionalism in the 21st Century, N.Y. St. B.J. (1997).
Joseph Brown & Dana H. Christiensen, Family Therapy: Theory and Practice 21 (1986).
John C. Buchanan, The Demise of Legal Professionalism: Accepting Responsibility and Implementing Change, 28 Val. U. L. Rev. 563, 566 (1994).
Warren E. Burger, The Decline of Professionalism, 61 Tenn. L. Rev. 1, 5 (1993).
Mark Byers, Ph. D., Don Samuelson, Esq., & Gordon Williamson, Esq., Lawyers in Transition: Planning a Life in the Law (2d ed. 1989).
Mary Crystal Cage, Stanford Law School Experiments With a Course That Teaches Students to Think Like Lawyers Chron. Higher Educ. (1996).
Geoffrey A. Campbell, In the Shoes of the Wrongly Accused, Americans Worried About Jury Fairness, Serious About Service, Study Says, A.B.A. J., June 1995, at 32.
Arian Campo-Flores, An Ambivalent Profession Am. Law. (April 1998).
Ronald L. Carlson, Competency and Professionalism in Modern Litigation: The Role of the Law Schools 23 Ga. L. Rev. 689 (1989).
David F. Cavers, Through Life: The Origin of Preventive Law by Louis M. Brown, 60 S. Cal. L. Rev. 1621 (1987).
Jill S. Chanen, The Heart of the Matter, Lawyers Can Have Problems in Hearing What a Client is Trying to Say. Listening Means Tuning in to Emotions and Getting Past Preconceived Notions, A.B.A. J., Mar. 1995, at 78.
Janet A. Chaplan, Youth Perspectives on Lawyers’ Ethics: A Report on Seven Interviews 64 Fordham L. Rev. 1763 (March 1996).
Timothy P. Chinaris, Professional Responsibility Law in Florida: The Year in Review, 1995, 20 Nova L. Rev. 223 (1995).
Sara Cobb, The Domestication of Violence in Mediation, 31 L. & Soc’y Rev. 3 (1997).
Robert F. Cochran, Lawyers and Virtues: A Review Essay of Mary Ann Glendon’s A Nation Under Lawyers: How The Crisis In The Legal Profession Is Transforming American Society And Anthony Kronman’s The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession, Taninan Rostain, The Company We Keep: Kronman’s Lost Lawyer And The Development Of Moral Imagination In The Practice Of Law, 21 L. Soc. Inquiry 1017 (1996).
Daniel A. Cohen, Making Elite Lawyers: Visions of Law at Harvard and Beyond by Robert Granfield 92 Mich. L. Rev. 1737 (1994).
Liz R. Cole, Lessons From A Semester In Practice, 1 Clinical L. Rev. 173 (1994).
Conference on the 30th Anniversary of the United States Supreme Court’s Decision in Gideon v. Wainwright: Gideon and the Public Service Role of Lawyers in Advancing Equal Justice, 43 Am. U. L. Rev. 1 (1993).
Conn. Bar Ass'n Comm. on Professional Ethics, Informal Op. 89-21 (1989) citing Law Man. on Prof. Conduct (ABA/BNA) 310 (July 29, 1989).
Consultant’s Digest, Law Student Attrition Data, 1995-96 (Spring 1996).
James M. Cooper, Toward a New Architecture: Creative Problem Solving and the Evolution of Law, 34(2) Cal. West. L. Rev. 297, 314 (Spring 1998).
N. Lee Cooper & Stephen F. Hemphreys, Beyond the Rules: Lawyer Image and the Scope of Professionalism, 26 Cumb. L. Rev. 923 (1995-6).
John J. Copelan, Jr. & Barbara S. Monahan, Preventive Law: A Strategy For Local Governments In The Nineties, 44 Syracuse L. Rev. 957 (1993).
Daniel R. Coquillette, Professionalism: The Deep Theory, 72 N.C. L. Rev. 1271, 1273-76 (1994).
Faye Couture, Karl T. Gruben, Jane Holland, Linda Will, & Susan Yancy, Question & Answers, 84 L. Libr. J. 409 (1992).
David F. Covers, Lawyering Through Life: The Origin of Preventive Law by Louis M. Brown, 60 S. Cal. L. Rev. 1621 (1987).
Gail Diane Cox, Lawyers Still Wage Uncivil War: Civility Codes Are in Vogue, But Insults, Lies and Hardball Haven't Stopped, Nat'l. L. J., July 17, 1995, at A1.
Roger C. Cramton, Delivery of Legal Services To Ordinary Americans, 44 Case W. Res. L. Rev. 531, 610 (1994) (prophesying that "[c]ompetition in legal services markets is a fact of life" and will definitely continue in the 21st century).
Colin Croft, Reconceptualizing American Legal Professionalism: A Proposal For Deliberative Moral Community, 67 N. Y. U. L. Rev. 1256, 1260-61 (1992).
Faye Crosby & Gregory M. Herek, Male Sympathy with the Situation of Women: Does Personal Experience Make a Difference?, 42(2) J. Soc. Issues 55 (1986).
Robert C. Cumbow, A Learned Profession, Law Students Need Grounding in Values, Responsibilities of the Law, A.B.A. J., July 1995, at 104.
Michele K. Cummings, Another Survey, So What Else is New? (discussion of Florida Bar v. Went For It), Fla. B. News, Aug. 15, 1995, at 3.
Jennifer Daehler, Professional Versus Moral Responsibility in the Developing World, 9 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 229 (1995).
Matthew M. Dammeyer & Narina Nunez, Anxiety and Depression Among Law Students: Current Knowledge and Future Directions, 1 Law & Human Behavior 23 (1999).
Edward A. Dauer & Leonard J. Marcus, Adapting Mediation to Link Resolution of Medical Malpractice Disputes with Health Care Quality Improvement, 1 Law & Contemporary Problems 60 (1998).
Edward A. Dauer, Leonard J. Marcus & Susan M.C. Payne, Prometheus and the Litigators: A Mediation Odyssey.
Ella Jane P. Davis, Thoughts on the "Emperor Complex," the "Scorched Earth Policy," and Lawyer Professionalism, 73 Fla. B. J. 30 (1999).
Pascal Denhaerinck, Jacques-Phillipe Leyans, & Vincent Yzerbt, The Dilution Effect and Group Membership: An Instance of the Pervasive Impact of Outgroup Homogeneity, 19 Eur. J. Soc. Psychol. 243 (1989).
John A. DeVault III, "My Lawyer's Dialing Finger is Broken," Fla. B. J., July-Aug. 1995, at 12.
Brent E. Dickson & Julia Bunton Jackson, Renewing Lawyer Civility, 28 Val. U. L. Rev. 531 (1994).
Louis P. DiLorenzo, Civility and Professionalism, 68 N.Y. St. B. J. 8, 8-9 (1996).
Jeff Dionise, Lawyers at Work (Chart), A.B.A. J., Mar. 1995, at 61.
Jeff Dionise, Striving for Happiness (Chart), A.B.A. J., July 1995, at 41.
Michael Distelhorst, Lawyers Suffering From Alcohol or Drug Addiction - Evolution of the Ohio Disciplinary System (unpublished manuscript) (year unknown).
Michael Distelhorst, Judging Ourselves as Heirs to the Realist Insight: The Role of Ethics as a Bridge Between Law and Life, 1 U. Cin. L. Rev. 60 (1991).
David T. Dodd, M.D., The Physician Personality and Adaptation to Distress, (unpublished manuscript) (year unknown).
John Patrick Dolan, Courtesy Is Its Own Reward, A.B.A. J. (January 1997).
Maura Dolan, Surveys: Many Lawyers Disillusioned, L.A. Times (June 25, 1995).
Dondi Properties Corp v. Commerce Savings & Loan Assoc., 121 F.R.D. 284 (N.D. Texas 1988).
Pauline A. Doucette & William E. Kelleher, Cognitive Style and Law Students in Eastern Canada: Preliminary Findings, C. Student J. (June 1998).
Stephen J. Douglas, Lawyer Perceptions (Letter to the Editor), Fla. B. News, Sept. 15, 1995, at 2.
Laurie B. Dowell, Attorneys and Alcoholism: An Alternative Approach to a Serious Problem, 16 N. Ky. L. Rev. 169, 170 (1988).
Adrienne Drell, Chilling Out, A.B.A. J., Oct. 1994, at 70, 72.
Eric Drogin, Psychological Type: Implications for Consultation to the Legal Profession, (unpublished dissertation) ( July 1989).
Eric Drogin, Law v. Life: What Lawyers Are Afraid to Say About the Legal Profession, 1995, 42 Fed. Law. 48 (1995).
Eric Drogin, Alcoholism in the Legal Profession: Psychological and Legal Perspectives and Interventions, 15 Law & Psychol. Rev. 117 (1991).
Lawrence Dubin, The Role of Law School in Balancing a Lawyer's Personal and Professional Life, J. Psychiatry & L. 57 (Spring 1982).
Joseph T. Ducanis, Jr., Aggressive Planning for Florida’s Annual Intangible Tax, 71 Fla. B.J. 38 (January 1997).
James R. Elkins, Va. L. Rev. (1978).
James R. Elkins, Rites de Passage: Law Students "Telling Their Lives," J. Legal Educ. (1985).
James R. Elkins, The Moral Labyrinth of Zealous Advocacy, 21 Cap. U. L. Rev. 735 (1992).
Stephen Ellmann, "The Ethic of Care as an Ethic for Lawyers", 81 Geo. L. J. 2665 (1993).
Amiram Elwork, Stress Management for Lawyers 77-78 (1995).
Henry W. Ewalt, Through The Client's Eyes: new Approaches to Get Clients To Hire You Again and Again (1994).
Fales, The Lawyer and His Health -Alcoholism, 56 N.Y. St. B.J. (1984).
Hailburton Fales, The Bar Association’s Role in Maintaining Professionalism, 69 N.Y. St. B.J. 48 (1997).
Heidi Li Feldman, Codes and Virtues: Can Good Lawyers Be Good Ethical Deliberators? 69 S. Cal. L. Rev. 885, 908 (1996) (characterizing the dichotomy as between "technocratic" (instrumental, value-neutral) lawyering and "honorable legal analysis" (or genuine ethical deliberation) and arguing that technocratic lawyering is not always appropriate).
Charlotte Moses Fischman & Jeffery Davis, The Lawyer as Civil Defendant: Recent Developments in the Law of Legal Malpractice, 403 PLI/Lit 609 (1990).
Fla. Bar v. Agar, 395 So.2d 404 (1980).
Fla. Bar v. Kirkpatrick, 567 So.2d 1377 (1990).
Fla. Bar v. Lopez, 406 So.2d 1100 (1981).
Fla. Bar v. Lund, 410 So.2d 922 (1982).
Fla. Bar v. Pearce, 356 So.2d 405 (1978).
Fla. Bar v. Rubin, 549 So.2d 1000 (1989).
Fla. Bar, Rules Regulating The Florida Bar, 64 Fla. B. J. 32, 118 (1990).
Fla. Bar v. Simmons, 391 So.2d 684 (1980).
Fla. Bar v. Went for It, Inc., 115 S.Ct. 2371, 132 L.Ed.2d 541 (1995).
Fla. St. Bar Rule 4-1.16
Fla. St. Bar Rule 4-3.3
Fla. St. Bar Rule 4-8.4
Florida State University College of Communication, The 1993 Attorney Communication Skills Inventory, (October 1993).
Hamilton P. Fox & Michael J. Crowley, Alcoholic Lawyers: Are They Being Coddled By Attorney Discipline Systems? A.B.A. J. (1996).
Paula A. Franzese, Back to the Future: Reclaiming Our Noble Profession, 25 Seton Hall L. Rev. 488 (1994) (reviewing Sol Linowitz & Martin Mayer, The Betrayed Profession: Lawyering at the End of the Twentieth Century (1994)).
Paula A. Franzese, To Be the Change: Finding Higher Ground in the Law, 50 Me. L. Rev. 11 (1998).
Monroe H. Freedman, Professionalism in the American Adversary System, 41 Emory L.J. 467 (1992).
James C. Freund, Sleeping Well at Night, Bus. L. Today, Jan.-Feb. 1996, at 16.
John W. Frost, III, The President's Page, "You Should Never Take More Than You Can Give", Fla. B. J. July-Aug. 1996, at 6.
Sara Galligan, Law v. Life: What Lawyers Are Afraid to Say About the Legal Profession 75 Mich. B. J. 177 (Feb 1996).
Leslie E. Gerber, Can Lawyers Be Saved? The Theological Legal Ethics of Thomas Shaffer, 10 J.L. & Religion 347 (1993-4).
John Gibeaut, Nourishing the Profession, 83 A.B.A. J. 92 (1997).
Carol Gilligan, S. Langsdale, Nona Lyons & J.M. Murphy, Contributions of Women's Elimination of Sex Bias in Moral Development Theory and Research, Final Report to National Institute of Education (1982).
Mary Ann Glendon, A Nation Under Lawyers: How the Crisis in the Legal Profession Is Transforming American Society (2d ed. 1995).
Theresa Glennon, Lawyers and Caring: Building an Ethic of Care Into Professional Responsibility, 43 Hastings L. J. 1175 (1992).
Hugh S. Glickstein, 1992: A Year to Rediscover the Best Interest of the Child, Fla. B. J., Feb. 1992, at 67.
Michelle E. Goff, The Oregon State Bar Professional Liability Fund Attorney Assistance Program, Drug Free Workplace by Dr. Dale A. Masi (1987).
Golden Door Jewelry Creations, Inc, et. Al v. Lloyds Underwriters Non-Marine Association, et. Al, 865 F.Supp. 1516 (S.D. Fl. 1994).
Michael D. Goldhaber, Workaholics of the World, Beware!.
Peter Goodrich, Maladies of the Legal Soul: Psychoanalysis and Interpretation in Law, 3 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 54 (1997).
Peter Goodrich, Oedipus Lex: Psychoanalysis, History, Law, (1995).
Peter Goodrich, Of Blackstone’s Tower: Metaphors of Distance and Histories of the English Law School, (1996).
Thomas H. Gosner, Preventive Law – The Role of Inside Counsel, C800 A.L.I.-A.B.A. 203 (1992).
Lorie M. Graham, Aristotle's Ethics and the Virtuous Lawyer: Part One of Study on Legal Ethics and Clinical Legal Education, 20 J. Legal Prof. 5, 43 (1995-1996).
James S. Granelli, The Happiest Lawyers: They Teach, Nat’l L.J. August 1980 10.
Bruce A. Green, The Role of Personal Values in Professional Decisionmaking, 11 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 19 (1997).
Richard A. Greenberg, Attorney Discipline: Nipping Grievances in the Bud, 65 Fla. B.J. 31-34 (1991).
John M. Grund, Some Oregon Lawyers Who Find Satisfaction in the Law, 54-Mar Or. St. B. Bull. 19 (1994).
Leonard J. Haas, John L. Malouf, & Neal H. Mayerson, Personal and Professional Characteristics as Factors in Psychologists' Ethical Decision Making, 19 Prof. Psychiatric Res. & Prac. 35-42 (1988).
John F. Hagemann, Rounding Up the Usual Suspects: A Review Essay, 40 S.D. L. Rev. 325 (1995).
V. L. Hamilton, Intuitive Psychologist or Intuitive Lawyer? Alternative Models of the Attribution Process, 39(5) J. Personality & Soc. Psychol. 767 (1980).
Susan M. Hammer, Redefining the Practice of Law, 53 Or. St. B. Bull. 15 (1993).
David L. Haron, Seven Practical Ways to Make Professionalism a Part of Your Life, 76 Mich. B. J. 972 (1997).
Steven Hartwell, Moral Development Ethical Conduct and Clinical Education, 35 N. Y. L. Sch. L. Rev. 131 (1990).
Steven Hartwell, Promoting Moral Development Through Experimental Teaching, 1 Clinical L. Rev. 505, 522-530 (1995).
Harv. L. Rev., Assoc., A Bold Leap Backward?, 108 Harv. L. Rev. 2047 (1995).
Harv. L. Rev. Assoc., Lawyer's Responsibilities to the Profession: Decoding the Ethics Code, 107 Harv. L. Rev. 1581 (1994).
S.R. Hathaway & J.C. McKinley, Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2: Manuel For Administration and Scoring 29-30 (1989).
Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr., In Defense of Lawyers, 93 Mich. L. Rev. 1196 (1995).
Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr., Commentary: Policy Implications, 10 J. L. & Health 79 (1995-96).
Susan Sage Heinzelman, Amateurs and Professionals, Lawyers and Critics: An Essay on Kornstein’s Shakespeare, 21 Law & Soc. Inquiry 185 (1996).
Lawrence K. Hellman, The Effects of Law Office Work on the Formation of Law Students’ Professional Values: Observation, Explanation, Optimization, Geo. J. Legal Ethics 4 (1991).
Lynne N. Henderson, The Wrongs of Victims Rights, 37 Stan. L. Rev. 937 (1985).
Silvia Ann Hewlett, Tough Choices, Great Rewards, Parade Mag., July 17, 1994, at 4.
Francis R. Hill, An Interview With Assistant Attorney General Loretta C. Argrett, AALS Tax Section Times (June 1999).
Hirsch Consulting, Striving for Happiness, A.B.A. J. (July 1995).
Steven H. Hobbs & Fay Wilson Hobbs, Family Businesses and the Business of Families: A Consideration of the Role of the Lawyer, 4 Tex. Wesleyan L. Rev. 153 (1998).
Peggy Fulton Hora & William G. Schma, As Demonstrated by Drug Courts, Judges Can Improve the Psychological Well Being of People Subject to the Legal Process and, in Turn, Make Their Own Jobs More Rewarding, 1 Judicature 82 (July-August 1998).
Peggy Fulton Hora, William G. Schma & John T.A. Rosenthal, Therapeutic Jurisprudence and the Drug Treatment Court Movement: Revolutionizing the Criminal Justice System’s Response to Drug Abuse and Crime in America, 74 Notre Dame L. Rev. 439 (Jan 1999).
R. Hogan, Moral Conduct and Moral Character: A Psychological Perspective, 79 Psy. Bull. 217 (1973).
Scott E. Isaacson, Preventive Law: A Personal Essay, 9 Utah B. J. 14, 14-17 (1996).
Mark Isola, Law v. Life: What Lawyers Are Afraid to Say About the Legal Profession, 1995, 36 Santa Clara L. Rev. 929 (1996).
Rand Jack & Dana C. Jack, Moral Visions And Professional Decisions: The Changing Values of Women And Men Lawyers, (1988).
Arleen Jacobius, Coming Back From Depression, A.B.A. J., April 1996, at 74, 76.
Michelle Jacobs, Legal Professionalism: Do Ethical Rules Require Repression For Poor People, 8 St. T. L. Rev. 97 (1995 ).
M. H. Sam Jacobson, Themes in Academic Support for Law Schools: Using Myer-Briggs Type Indicator to Assess Learning Style: Type or Stereotype?, 33 Williamette L. Rev. 261 (1997).
Jon Jefferson, But What Role for the Soul?, 77 A.B.A. J. 60 (1991).
Rita H. Jensen, Recycling the American Dream, A.B.A. J., Apr. 1996, at 68.
Michael Jordan, Law Teachers and the Educational Continuum, 5 S.Cal. Interdis. L. J. 41 (1996).
Ralph S. Josephsohn, Lawyer Jokes (And Other Ethical Traps for the Unwary Public Attorney), 23 Colo. Law. 369 (1994).
Peter A. Joy, What We Talk About When We Talk About Professionalism: A Review of Lawyers’ Ideals/Lawyers’ Practices: Transformations in the American Legal Profession, 7 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 987 (1994).
Sanford H. Kadish, Complicity, Cause and Blame: A Study in the Interpretation of Doctrine, 73 Cal. L. Rev. 323 (1985).
Robert M. Kallam, Mentor Program Pairs Attorneys for Betterment of Profession, 44 La. B.J. (April 1997).
Wendy Kaminer, The Privacy Problem, Legislate Behavior Too Much, And You Endanger the Right to Privacy. Too Little and You Endanger Everyone. Wendy Kaminer Separates the Personal From the Political, Mirabella, April 1994, at 34.
Marvin L. Karp, Some Reflections on Change and Professionalism, 24-SUM Brief 9 (1995).
Andrew Kaufman, A Commentary on Pepper's "The Lawyer's Amoral Ethical Role," 1986 Am. B. Found. Res. J. 651, 652, 655 (1986) (adopting neither Stephen Pepper's support of the amoral role nor David Luban's criticism of it; instead admitting a preference for "eclectic views on the theoretical issue that divides" the two scholars and suggesting that a more contextual, case-by-case analysis is appropriate).
Debra Kaufman & Michael L. Fetters, Work Motivation and Job Values Among Profession Men and Women: A New Accounting, 17 J. Vocational Behav. 251 (1980).
Byron C. Keeling, A Prescription For Healing the Crisis in Professionalism: Shifting the Burden of Enforcing Professional Standards of Conduct, 25 Tex. Tech. L. Rev. 31, 31 (1993).
Steven Keeva, Transforming Practices (1999).
Steven Keeva, Storm Warnings, After Months of Courtroom Maneuvering in the O.J. Simpson Case, the Public is Ready to Indict the Entire Criminal Justice System, A.B.A. J., June 1995, at 77.
Steven Keeva, The Nicest Tough Firm Around, A.B.A. J. (May 1999).
Mark D. Killian, Survey: Lawyers Working Harder, Earning More, 13 Fla. B. News 25 (July 1, 1998).
Arthur Kinoy, The Role of the People’s Lawyer in the 1990s, 2 Temp. Pol. & Rts. L. Rev. 209 (1993).
Richard Kirkeby, Drunk, Drugged and Stressed: Problems Pervade Lawyers' Lives Luck Attorney Drank Her Way Through Life With Everything Lost, The Other Bar Started, 871 PLI/Corp. 355 (1994).
Lawrence Kohlberg, The Cognitive-Developmental Approach to Moral Education, in Readings in Moral Education 50-51 (date).
Lawrence Kohlberg, The Psychology of Moral Development 7-19, 621-639 (1984).
Alfie Kohn, No Contest -- The Case Against Competition 54 (1986).
Russell Korobkin & Chris Guthrie, Psychology, Economics, and Settlement: A New Look at the Role of the Lawyer, 76 Tex. L. Rev. 77 (Nov. 1997).
Kenneth Kressel, Allan Hochberg, & Theodore S. Merth, A Professional Typology of Lawyer Attitudes Towards Divorce Practice (1983).
Anthony T. Kronman, as explained by David B. Wilkins, Practical Wisdom For Practicing Lawyers: Separating Ideals From Ideology in Legal Ethics, 108 Harv. L. Rev. 458, 460-61 (1994).
Louise A. LaMothe, Opening Statement, Where are We Going Anyway?, 19(1) Litig. 1 (1992).
Wendy H. Lamphear, Improving the Image of the Legal Profession, 24 Colo. Law. 1 (1995).
Shanie Latham, Is Law School Still A Man's World?, Nat'l. Jurist, Oct.-Nov. 1995, at 22.
Law Office Management and Administration Report, Attorneys Take Lion’s Share of Earnings Among Professionals 96-2 Law Off. Mgmt. & Admin. Rep. 4 (1996).
Law School Admission Council, Law Services Report, Jan.-Feb. 1996.
Law School Admission Council, Law Services Report, July-Aug. 1996.
Law School Admission Council, Law Services Report, Sept.-Oct. 1996.
Lawyer Blues, A.B.A. J. (May 1991).
R. S. Lazarus & A. DeLongis, Psychological Stress and Coping in Aging, 3 Am. Psychol. 245, 246.
Darrin R. Lehman, Jon A. Krosnick, Robert West, & Fan Li, The Focus of Judgment Effect: A Question Wording Effect Due to Hypothesis Confirmation Bias, 18(6) Personality & Soc. Psychol. Bull. 690 (1992).
Sebastian J. Leonardi, Road Map to the Internet, Barrister Mag., Spring 1995, at 16.
L. Harold Levinson, Making Society’s Legal System Accessible to Society: The Lawyer’s Role and its Implications, 41 Vand. L. Rev. 789 (1988).
Sanford Levinson, Mary Ann Glendon, A Nation Under Lawyers: How The Crisis In The Legal Profession Is Transforming American Society, 45 J. Legal Educ.143 (1995).
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James J. White, Women In the Law, 65 Mich. L. Rev. 1051, 1069-1070 (1967).
James P. White, AFLI Clinical Program Receives USIA Grant, Syllabus 27 (Spring 1996).
Phillip A. Whitmann, Should "Professionalism" Be Mandatory? Can Civility Be Taught? 45 La. B.J. 19 (1997).
Linda F. Wighton, Legal Education at the Close of the Twentieth Century: Descriptions and Analysis of Students, Financing, and Professional Expectations and Attitudes, LSAC Research Report Series (1996).
Linda F. Wighton, Women in Legal Education: A Comparison o f the Law School Performance and Law School Experiences of Women and Men, LSAC Research Report Series (1996).
David B. Wilkins, Practical Wisdom For Practicing Lawyers: Separating Ideals From Ideology in Legal Ethics, 108 Harv. L. Rev. 458, 460-61 (1994).
David B. Wilkins, Redefining the "Professional" in Professional Ethics: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Teaching Professionalism, 58 L. & Contemp. Probs. 241 (1996).
David B. Wilkins, Straight Jacketing Professionalism: A Comment on Russell, 95 Mich L. Rev. 795 (1997).
Margaret A. Wilkins, John M. McGuire, David Abbott, & Burton I. Blau, Willingness to Apply Understood Ethical Principles, 46 J. Clinical Psychol. 539-547 (1990).
A.Y. Williams, Survey Return Rate as a Function of Personalization of Cover Letters and Monetary Incentives (1990) (unpublished M. thesis, University of Central Florida (Orlando).
Charles W. Wolfram, Modern Legal Ethics. (West Publishing Co. 1986).
Don J. Young, & Louise L. Hill, Professionalism: The Necessity For Internal Control, 61 Temp. L. Rev. 205-211 (1988).
Fred C. Zacharias, Reconciling Professionalism and Client Interests, 36 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 1303 (1995) (arguing that ethics codes are silent or ambiguous in various ethical dilemmas, and that lawyers' natural incentives lead them to choose "partisanship," or blindly zealous advocacy, over "objectivity," or an approach that includes the lawyers' personal values and considers what is best for all involved in the situation, not simply what is best for the client).
William P. Zdancewicz, Alternative Dispute Resolution in the Personal Injury Forum, Univ of Memphis L. Rev. 26 (
F. K. Zemans & V. G. Rosenblum, The Making of a Public Profession 1, 137 (Chicago: American Bar Foundation, 1981).
Paul J. Zwier & Ann B. Hamric, The Ethics of Care and Reimagining the Lawyer/Client Relationship, 22 J. Contemp. L. 383 (1996) (arguing that an ethic of care may be more helpful in the lawyer-client relationship than a rights orientation, which is associated with a client-centered counseling analysis elevating the client's interests above all other interests).
William van Zyverden, Collaborative Law: Moving Settlement Toward Resolution, 20-FEB Vt. B.J. & L. Dig. 35 (1994).
William van Zyverden Lawyer Dissatisfaction, 22-JUN Vt. B.J. & L. Dig. 33 (1996).
William van Zyverden, Practicing Law as if Justice Actually Matters, 22-FEB Vt. B.J. & L. Dig. 32 (1996).
William van Zyverden, Lessons From Marley, Esq.’s Ghost: Adapted From Dickens’ A Christmas Carol (1843), 43-DEC Fed. Law. 39 (1996).