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Core Values: Professionalism and Independence Theories in Lawyer Regulation

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Core Values: Professionalism and Independence Theories in Lawyer Regulation
Abstract
Traditional lawyer self-regulation, which has been abrogated or significantly compromised in most wealthy countries, lives on in anglophone North America. In the United States and in common law Canada, lawyers make and enforce almost all of the rules which govern legal service delivery. These regulatory regimes are also distinctive in their (i) maintenance of a single, unified occupation of "lawyer," (ii) insulation of law firms from non-lawyer ownership, and (iii) near-exclusive regulatory focus on individual lawyers as opposed to law firms. Other wealthy English-speaking countries (the UK, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand) have gradually abandoned all of these elements of traditional lawyer regulation over the past 40 years.
Genre
SSRN Scholarly Paper
Archive ID
2262518
Place
Rochester, NY
Date
2013-05-08
Accessed
9/10/23, 10:34 PM
Short Title
Core Values
Language
en
Library Catalog
Social Science Research Network
Citation
Semple, N. (2013). Core Values: Professionalism and Independence Theories in Lawyer Regulation (SSRN Scholarly Paper 2262518). https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2262518
Author / Editor