Just Lawyersproposes a model for the regulation and organization of lawyers, guided by an ideal of access to justice. It is grounded in empirical analysis of why people complain about lawyers, the sociology of existing legal institutions, and how lawyers think about the ethics of their profession.
1. Doorkeepers to Many Rooms 2. Judging Lawyers by Justice 3. Access to Justice 4. Integrating Justice 5. The Ethics of Justice 6. Competing Images of the Legal Profession: Competing Regulatory Strategies 7. Renegotiating the Regulation of the Legal Profession 8. Speaking Justice to Power: A Fifth Wave of Access to Justice Reform? 9. Lawyers in the Republic of Justice Appendix: Methodology for Chapter Six Case Study References Index 1. Doorkeepers to Many Rooms 2. Judging Lawyers by Justice 3. Access to Justice 4. Integrating Justice 5. The Ethics of Justice 6. Competing Images of the Legal Profession: Competing Regulatory Strategies 7. Renegotiating the Regulation of the Legal Profession 8. Speaking Justice to Power: A Fifth Wave of Access to Justice Reform? 9. Lawyers in the Republic of Justice Appendix: Methodology for Chapter Six Case Study References Index
Christine Parker is a Post-Doctoral Fellow in the Law Faculty of the University of New South Wales, Australia