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Ethical Problems in the Practice of Law

Ethical Problems in the Practice of LawAuthors: Lisa G. Lerman, Philip G. Schrag
Publisher: Aspen Publishers, Inc.
Category: Book

List Price: $156.00
Buy Used: $62.00
as of 3/10/2010 06:38 CST details
You Save: $94.00 (60%)



New (25) Used (47) from $62.00

Seller: Textbooks (Law)
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 320904

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 2
Pages: 976
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.4
Dimensions (in): 10.3 x 7.1 x 1.9

ISBN: 0735565295
Dewey Decimal Number: 174.3
EAN: 9780735565296
ASIN: 0735565295

Publication Date: April 22, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Ethical Problems In The Practice Of Law (Casebook)
  • Hardcover - Ethical Problems in the Practice of Law

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Covering all of the essential issues and topics, Ethical Problems in the Practice of Law, Second Edition, offers straightforward exposition and a combination of principal cases and real-case problems that generate lively class discussion and encourage strategic analysis.


Engage your students with a contemporary approach that features:

thorough coverage of the ethics codes and other law governing lawyers, including legal malpractice, disqualification, wrongful discharge, and criminal malfeasance
concise, clear explanation of lawyer law in a readable question and answer format

an overview of the American legal profession and the challenges facing lawyers in the 21st century
more than 70 engaging problems for classroom discussion, some based on court opinions, others based on actual situations encountered by lawyers and law students

principal cases edited with care and presented with questions for discussion

tables and conceptual outlines that highlight relationships, illustrate concepts, and aid memory
photos of many lawyers and parties discussed in the text

more than 20 New Yorker cartoons illustrating classic ethical dilemmas
a detailed Teacher s Manual that provides thorough analysis of the hypothetical problems, formatted for easy adaptation to classnotes as well as fascinating post mortems and contextual commentary about the cases. After classroom analysis of a problem, a professor can tell the students 'what really happened.'


Thoroughly updated, the Second Edition now has a more flexible organization and coverage of important recent developments in the law, rules, and code, including:
updates reflecting recent revision of the state Rules of Professional Conduct in response to the Ethics 2000 Commission

new material on lawyers as counselors, the special duties of prosecutors, lawyer advertising, aggregate and class action settlements, and the revised Model Code of Judicial Conduct

new problems and cases

discussion of government challenges to the corporate attorney-client privilege

pedagogical fine-tuning based on feedback from scores of enthusiastic adopters and students at more than eighty US law schools

Respected scholars Lerman and Schrag have created an accessible, problem-based casebook that generates rich classroom discussion in courses in Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility.


Customer Reviews:
5 out of 5 stars Good Book   December 10, 2008
T. Rodriguez (Gainesville, Florida)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I just finished my PR course. Its a readable and interesting book. Its full of problems that are good discussion material in class or in a study group context (our professor spent lots of time fleshing out the issues in the problems, especially given the lack of significant case law on this subject and the main focus on rule analysis). It even has charicatures that make for nice periodic rests from reading. I really dont think that the negative review is fair to this text.


5 out of 5 stars Ethics book   June 11, 2009
ltlgtr44 (Florida, FL)
0 out of 2 found this review helpful

Great book! Came in 3 days and was in great condition, even though it was used! I will def order from this person again.


3 out of 5 stars Uh. It's a textbook.   September 28, 2007
K. K. Smith (New York, NY United States)
2 out of 8 found this review helpful

Nobody buys textbooks because they want to, they do it because they are required to by a professor. This textbook is no different. It is fine, it has a sensible layout and reasonable problems. Whatever. It's a textbook.


1 out of 5 stars Shoddily put together substantively and otherwise   October 23, 2008
K. Lee
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This textbook is vaguely written, unorganized, and poorly edited. The ABA rules are sprinkled throughout in a haphazard manner in no particular order except as relevant to the particular chapter. There is no comprehensive collection of these rules for easy access anywhere throughout.

There are few cases to assist in illustrating these rules; the authors have apparently spent all their time transforming helpful cases into open ended hypothetical problems that are of little to no help in actually informing the reader. This textbook format is unique and unusual in law books and should be applauded for creativity, even if the result is an incoherent inability to pass on information to the student.

From an editing standpoint, there are typos throughout that are embarrassing for Aspen Publishing as well as the authors. All of Chapter 6's headings on every page read "Chatper 6", for example. Just incredibly poorly done. My worst textbook of the entire 3 years of law school.



1 out of 5 stars Completely Destroyed Upon Arrival   February 7, 2010
A. Mitchell
This book looked like it had been stabbed when I got it. It is in terrible condition and missing most of the last 100 pages. I will never buy anything from here again! It was wrapped in paper and totally destroyed when I got it in the mail. I deserve a refund for this joke of a book. If I could have chosen zero stars I would have. This book is totally worthless due to the condition.


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