- From adaptive to reflective law school socialisation: a theoretical and empirical contribution from the Netherlands
- Traditional communities in Indonesia (law, identity, and recognition)
- Reexamining the integrative approach to legal ethics education: the case of Hong Kong as an Asian financial centre
- Between Continuity and Change in the Italian Legal Profession – Boutique Law Firms as the Last Bastion of Professionalism
- Between continuity and change in the Italian legal profession – boutique law firms as the last bastion of professionalism
- An emotionally vulnerable profession? Profession values and emotions within legal practice
- An emotionally vulnerable profession? professional values and emotions within legal practice
- Ethical lawyering in the Anthropocene
- Liberal egalitarianism and critical legal studies: articles of conciliation
- Consequentialism and problem of role morality in legal ethics
- Should judges be temperate in their speech?
- Judging without railings: an ethic of responsible judicial decision-making for future generations
- The case of David vs. Goliath. On legal ethics and corporate lawyering in large-scale liability cases
- Loyalty to client, conviction, or constitution? The moral responsibility of public professionals under illiberal state pressures
- ‘Overcoming a clash of absolutes: the conflicting ethical demands posed by access to medicines litigation confronted by Latin American judges’
- Special issue: professional ethical judgment for global challenges
- A code of judicial ethics as a signpost and a beacon: on virtuous judgecraft and Dutch climate litigation
- Facilitating professional normative judgement through science-policy interfaces: the case of anthropogenic land subsidence in the Netherlands
- Virtuous judges, politicisation, and decision-making in the judicialized legal landscape
- Lawyers’ ethical and practice norms in mediation: including emotion as part of the Australian Guidelines for Lawyers in Mediation
- Valuing diverse students: an ethical response to building success in first-year law students and broadening the legal profession
- Trends in legal ethics research: a bibliometric analysis
- The bounds of legality: an exploration of the limits on ethical advocacy in family law
- Ethics in practice in asylum law: asylum legal aid lawyers’ moral reasoning in respect of ‘hopeless cases’
- The discipline of, and failure to sanction, sexual misconduct by Australian legal practitioners
- ‘To act is to be committed, and to be committed is to be in danger’: the vulnerability of the young lawyer in ethical crisis
- Agency over technocracy: how lawyer archetypes infect regulatory approaches: the FCA example
- ‘Fit and proper’ coders? How might legal service delivery by non-lawyers be regulated?
- The grey zone: the implications of the ageing legal profession in Australia
- Soft law, legal ethics and the corporate lawyer: confronting human rights and sustainability norms
- The corporate general counsel who respects human rights
- Be careful what you wish for: a European perspective on the limits of CSR in the legal profession
- Professional responsibility and the defence of extractive corporations in transnational human rights and environmental litigation in Canadian courts
- Lawyers are not algorithms: sustainability, corruption, and the role of the lawyer in institutional frameworks and corporate transactions
- Ethical imperatives for legal educators to promote law student wellbeing
- Entity regulation, litigation rights and the changing meaning of professionalism at the Bar of England and Wales
- Bar exams, legal ethics and the fight against corruption: lessons from Brazil
- Practising law for rich and poor people: towards a more progressive approach
- Reflection and clinical legal education: how do students learn about their ethical duty to contribute towards justice
- Learning legal ethics in the law clinics: ‘one hundred thousand housing law’ for offences against minors
- Lawyers, mental illness, admission and misconduct
- Matter Mills and London-Lite offices: exploring forms of the onshoring of legal services in an age of globalisation
- Economic corruption, political machinations and legal ethics: correspondents’ report from Canada
- Fighting the good fight? Lessons from the Global South on providing legal aid to refugees in difficult situations
- Professional associations as regulators: an interview study of the Law Society of New South Wales
- Persuasive legal narrative: articulating ethical standards
- Did Joe Groia kill the civility movement?
- Increasing the emphasis on family law lawyering: correspondent’s report from Canada
- Governance gone wrong: examining self-regulation of the legal profession
- Computer systems fit for the legal profession?
- Lawyer independence under the spotlight in Australia
- Interviewing real clients and the ways it deepens students’ understandings of legal ethics
- Elder abuse and lawyers’ ethical responsibilities: incorporating screening into practice
- Deferring to the ‘unlearned’ friend: professional ethics and the unrepresented litigant
- ‘He was wearing street clothes, not pyjamas’: common mistakes in lawyers’ assessment of legal capacity for vulnerable older clients
- Challenge and change in the Canadian legal profession
- Germany: towards a legal profession of specialists?
- Technological competence and the duty to safeguard confidential information in the USA
- The moral interpretation of law: comparative remarks on Dworkin’s legal principles and Islamic law’s Maqāṣid
- Should lawyers acknowledge whom they represent in public discourse?
- Collaborative Law: an (un)ethical process for lawyers?
- The unprofessional professional: do lawyers need rules?
- Special issue: the ethics of judicial appointments
- Ethical considerations in judicial appointments in Nigeria: the role of special judicial bodies
- How many chief justices? Judicial appointments and ethics in Queensland
- The resignation of Robin Camp: background and reflections from Canada
- The ethics and regulation of lawyers worldwide: the seventh international legal ethics conference, New York
- Rethinking the Lord Chancellor’s role in judicial appointments
- The Achilles heel of the Canadian judiciary: the ethics of judicial appointments in Canada
- Lawyer self-regulation and the public interest: a reflection
- Legal ethics training between a rock and a hard place in Germany
- Partisan judicial speech and recusal procedure
- Justice Ginsburg, President Trump, and the need for judicial disqualification reform
- Rebooting the cab rank rule as a limited universal service obligation
- An empirical study of Hong Kong law students’ ethical values: Does common law education enhance their professionalism?
- An ‘existential’ shift? Technology and some questions for the legal profession
- Barristers, the Bar Standards Board and the structural bias of appointing disciplinary tribunals in England and Wales
- Pride and prejudice: a case for reform of judicial recusal procedure
- Attorney ‘mal-practices’: an invisible ethical problem in the early American republic
- Reflections on ‘professionalism’ and legal practice – an outmoded ideology or an analytically useful category?
- Remaining the same, staying different – Attwells v Jackson Lalic Lawyers
- Pro bono lawyering: personal motives and institutionalised practice
- Will drafting – clarifying the scope of the duty owed by a solicitor to a client and to the intended beneficiaries in Australia
- Insolvency law’s limits on the disciplinary powers of professional regulators: an update from Canada
- The legal professions’ new handbooks: narratives, standards and values
- Ethics begin at home
- The regulation of government litigants and their lawyers: the regulatory force of Victoria’s model litigant guidelines