Legal ethics and professional conduct Books
Edinburgh University Press Scottish Medical Law Essentials 2nd edition
Book SynopsisYour indispensable guide to Medical Law in Scotland, fully updated with the latest statutes and case law.
£18.99
SAGE Publications Inc Counselling Psychotherapy and the Law
Book Synopsis`Jenkins' book makes the law relevant, understandable and manageable to counsellors and psychotherapists. It makes clear, reassuring and essential reading for therapists in training as well as those in practice. [All] counsellors and psychotherapisys need to be up to speed with the law and with how it relates to their work. This book is more than timely with the impending introduction of regulation, and the fact that increasingly the work of counsellors and psychotherapists is being subjected to legal scrutiny' - Healthcare Counselling and Psychotherapy JournalCounselling, Psychotherapy and the Law is the long-awaited Second Edition of Peter Jenkins' comprehensive introduction to legal issues in relation to counselling and psychotherapy in the UK. This text has been fully updated to include coverage of the key developments in the law that have had major impact on therapists' practice with regard to data protection and the management of confidentialityTrade Review This is a book for the current times, where the professions are experiencing a heightened concern for ethical behaviour among their practitioners. Peter Jenkins appreciates the dilemmas facing the professions offering counselling and psychotherapy, especially that of the protected space versus the protected professional. Helpful to the reader are the boxes and case studies throughout the text. The boxes outline key points. The case studies are excerpts from law reports, published personal accounts by clients and books by therapists and bring immediacy and life to the concepts. While directed at a UK audience of counsellors and psychotherapists, this book is suitable for the Australian context. This is a valuable book for those practicing counselling and psychotherapy. -- Cecelia Winkelman * Journal of Family Studies * Despite requiring real concentration, this is an essential read for counsellors and psychotherapists irrespective of background and theoretical orientation. Trainers, supervisors and agency coordinators especially would benefit from the up to date material contained here. -- Therapy Today Jenkins′ book makes the law relevant, understandable and manageable to counsellors and psychotherapists. It makes clear, reassuring and essential reading for therapists in training as well as those in practice. [All] counsellors and psychotherapisys need to be up to speed with the law and with how it relates to their work. This book is more than timely with the impending introduction of regulation, and the fact that increasingly the work of counsellors and psychotherapists is being subjected to legal scrutiny. -- Healthcare Counselling and Psychotherapy Journal Peter Jenkins has consulted widely over the content of this book, both within the psychological therapies field and with legal eagles. [His] use of clear flow diagrams and comparison boxes enable the reader to identify the similarities and differences between professional and moral/ethical debates. It is a thoroughly researched and accessible text. -- Association for University and College Counselling Journal A comprehensive overview of a rapidly evolving field. This book represents a helpful addition to practitioners′ bookshelves as a reference work, but also a beneficial read to stimulate thoughtful responses to practical dilemmas. It provides a good support to both therapeutic and supervision practices across the spectrum of experience and theoretical models. -- The PsychotherapistTable of ContentsTHERAPY, ETHICS AND THE LAW Therapy and the Law Ethical Principles and the law THE LEGAL CONTEXT OF THERAPY Content and Structure of the Law Communicating Information Law Relating To Service Provision and Employment THERAPISTS, COURTS AND THE LEGAL SYSTEM Reform of the Civil Law System Structure of the Court System Practical Aspects of Therapists′ Involvement with the Courts Professional Aspects of Therapists′ Involvement with the Courts PROFESSIONAL NEGLIGENCE, LIABILITY AND DUTY OF CARE Professional Negligence Therapy Case Law Indemnity Insurance and Professional Protection Societies CONFIDENTIALITY, PRIVILEGE AND THE PUBLIC INTEREST Confidentiality Privilege and Confidentiality Confidentiality and the Public Interest Breaking Confidentiality DATA PROTECTION AND ACCESS TO CLIENT RECORDS Recording Therapeutic Work Access to Client Material THERAPY WITH CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE The Rights of Children and Young People Key Issues in Therapy with Children and Young People Settings for Therapy with Children and Young People STATUTORY REGULATION OF THERAPISTS Statutory Recognition of Therapy Statutory Regulation of Therapists Therapy, Professional Power and Society
£42.74
American Psychological Association Ethical Practice in Forensic Psychology
Book SynopsisThis thoroughly updated guide provides forensic psychologists with a practical, systemic ethical decision-making model to negotiate common dilemmas in civil, criminal, and family law cases.Table of Contents Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: The Interface of Law and Psychology: An Overview Chapter 2: The Referral Chapter 3: Collection and Review of Information Chapter 4: The Evaluation Chapter 5: Documentation of Findings and Opinions Chapter 6: Testimony and Termination Chapter 7: Addressing Ethical Misconduct Afterword References About the Authors
£67.50
Wolters Kluwer Ethical Problems in the Practice of Law For
Book Synopsis
£153.51
Edinburgh University Press Levinas Ethics and Law
Book SynopsisMatthew Stone asks what unites apparently disparate applications of Levinas' ideas about law and explores the ethical challenge of law's relationship with 'the Other'. Ultimately, he is sceptical that Levinasian ethics can be invested in legal institutions and instead proposes that it should be embodied in the perpetual critique of law.Table of ContentsAcknowledgements; Part I: The Importance of Ethics; 1. Introduction: The Law's Other; 2. The Ethics of Emmanuel Levinas; Part II: Ethics and Law; 3. Can Law Be Ethical?; 4. Adjudication, Obligation, and Human Rights: Applying Levinas's Ethics; Part III: Ethics Against the Law; 5. The Law of the Same: Levinas and the Biopolitical Limits of Liberalism; 6. Law, Ethics, and Political Subjectivity; Bibliography; Index.
£94.50
Edinburgh University Press Levinas Ethics and Law
Book SynopsisMatthew Stone asks what unites apparently disparate applications of Levinas' ideas about law and explores the ethical challenge of law's relationship with 'the Other'. Ultimately, he is sceptical that Levinasian ethics can be invested in legal institutions and instead proposes that it should be embodied in the perpetual critique of law.
£22.79
Edinburgh University Press Global Displacement in the TwentyFirst Century
Book SynopsisBuilds an ethical framework for responding to the urgent crisis of global displacementTrade Review"Cole's arguments transform long standing debates about asylum to show how a global order that delivers justice for all must have displaced people at its heart. Brilliantly argued and engagingly written, this book shows us why theory matters, and how careful conceptual work helps change the world." -Bridget Anderson, Migration Mobilities Bristol
£100.45
New York University Press Understanding Police Interrogation
Book SynopsisUses techniques from psychological science and legal theory to explore police interrogation in the United States Understanding Police Interrogation provides a single comprehensive source for understanding issues relating to police interrogation and confession. It sheds light on the range of factors that may influence the outcome of the interrogation of a suspect, which ones make it more likely that a person will confess, and which may also inadvertently lead to false confessions. There is a significant psychological component to police interrogations, as interrogators may try to build rapport with the suspect, or trick them into thinking there is evidence against them that does not exist. Also important is the extent to which the interrogator is convinced of the suspect's guilt, a factor that has clear ramifications for today's debates over treatment of black suspects and other people of color in the criminal justice system. The volume employs a totality of the circumstances approach, Trade ReviewWill serve as an invaluable contribution to our understanding of the psychology of police interrogation. . . . This book will appeal to a wide audience and likely encourage new lines of research. -- Iris Blandon-Gitlin, California State University, FullertonWe need the police to help keep us safe. But every now and then things go terribly wrong. People confess to crimes they did not commit, and juries convict those innocent people. Why? This terrific volume helps us to understand. Woody and Forrest offer insights on how the police do their job, from both a basic science and a practical point of view. Readers can join these scholars as they think about how our justice system can fix these mistakes or prevent them before they happen. Anyone who cares about the fairness of our system of justice will find inspiration in this book. -- Elizabeth F. Loftus, Past President, Association for Psychological ScienceFor scholars interested in interrogation, this is an excellent resource. * Choice *Well written and well organized ... Professionals in law enforcement as well as students in the field of police science, criminal justice or forensics, will benefit greatly from this book. * Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Book Reviews *
£25.19
New York University Press Understanding Police Interrogation
Book SynopsisUses techniques from psychological science and legal theory to explore police interrogation in the United States Understanding Police Interrogation provides a single comprehensive source for understanding issues relating to police interrogation and confession. It sheds light on the range of factors that may influence the outcome of the interrogation of a suspect, which ones make it more likely that a person will confess, and which may also inadvertently lead to false confessions. There is a significant psychological component to police interrogations, as interrogators may try to build rapport with the suspect, or trick them into thinking there is evidence against them that does not exist. Also important is the extent to which the interrogator is convinced of the suspect's guilt, a factor that has clear ramifications for today's debates over treatment of black suspects and other people of color in the criminal justice system. The volume employs a totality of the circumstances approach, Trade ReviewWill serve as an invaluable contribution to our understanding of the psychology of police interrogation. . . . This book will appeal to a wide audience and likely encourage new lines of research. -- Iris Blandon-Gitlin, California State University, FullertonWe need the police to help keep us safe. But every now and then things go terribly wrong. People confess to crimes they did not commit, and juries convict those innocent people. Why? This terrific volume helps us to understand. Woody and Forrest offer insights on how the police do their job, from both a basic science and a practical point of view. Readers can join these scholars as they think about how our justice system can fix these mistakes or prevent them before they happen. Anyone who cares about the fairness of our system of justice will find inspiration in this book. -- Elizabeth F. Loftus, Past President, Association for Psychological ScienceFor scholars interested in interrogation, this is an excellent resource. * Choice *Well written and well organized ... Professionals in law enforcement as well as students in the field of police science, criminal justice or forensics, will benefit greatly from this book. * Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Book Reviews *
£73.80
New York University Press Loving Justice
Book SynopsisA history of legal emotions in William Blackstone's England and their relationship to justiceWilliam Blackstone's masterpiece, Commentaries on the Laws of England (17651769), famously took the ungodly jumble of English law and transformed it into an elegant and easily transportable four-volume summary. Soon after publication, the work became an international monument not only to English law, but to universal English concepts of justice and what Blackstone called the immutable laws of good and evil. Most legal historians regard the Commentaries as a brilliant application of Enlightenment reasoning to English legal history. Loving Justice contends that Blackstone's work extends beyond making sense of English law to invoke emotions such as desire, disgust, sadness, embarrassment, terror, tenderness, and happiness. By enlisting an affective aesthetics to represent English law as just, Blackstone created an evocative poetics of justice whose influence persists across the Western world. In dTrade Review"There is significant interest in the writings of William Blackstone amongst scholars and practitioners in the legal domain, and Kathryn Temple sheds new light upon his legacy. But what makes this book especially fascinating is this re-imagining of the aesthetic and emotional world of eighteenth-century English law, and the re-viewing of texts in regards thereto. This is a superb work." * Robert Barsky, Professor of Law, Vanderbilt Law School *"A gorgeous book. The writing is beautiful, the organization is lucid, and the ideas are sophisticated and insightful." * Susan A. Bandes, Centennial Professor of Law Emeritus, DePaul University College of Law *"In this first sustained close reading of Blackstone’s Commentaries as a work of high art and sensibility, Kathyrn Temple locates book and author in their eighteenth-century emotional context, while showing how they can still speak to us today." * Wilfrid Prest, author of William Blackstone: Law and Letters in the Eighteenth Century *"Kathryn Temple provides a unique multi-disciplinary perspective on English law in the eighteenth century by taking account of the emotions and aesthetics of Blackstone’s Commentaries. This learned and witty book is a must-read for anyone interested in the popular appeal of justice in all its complexity." * David Lemmings, ARC Centre for the History of Emotions, University of Adelaide *"Loving Justice delicately shows how Blackstone’s biography and the systematisation of the common law are intertwined, engendering a range of emotions. Recommended." * Choice *
£33.25
University of Toronto Press Ethics Out of Law
Book SynopsisThis is the first book in English to lay out the philosophical ethics and philosophy of law of Hermann Cohen, one of the leading figures in both Neo-Kantian and Jewish philosophy.Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. Cohen’s “Methodistic” Founding of Ethics in Legal Science: Generation of the Legal Person 2. “For the Idea of Law [Gesetz] He Substitutes Morality”: Understanding Law in Cohen’s Ethik, with Help from the Early Strauss 3. Philosophico-Political Theology as Method: From Strauss’s Philosophy and Law to Cohen’s “Philosophy of Jewish Religion” 4. Isolation and Universalism: Cohen’s New Messianic Politics of Jewish Law 5. Against “Affective Expansiveness”: Cohen’s Critique of Stammler’s Theory of “Right Law” 6. The “Neighbor” as an Institution of Law (Recht), from the Ethik to the “Jewish Writings”
£49.50
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Habitual Ethics?
Book SynopsisThis open access book explores the conditions under which habit – and pre-reflective agency – can remain at the service of our ethical lives. What if data-intensive technologies’ ability to mould habits with unprecedented precision is also capable of triggering some mass disability of profound consequences? What if we become incapable of modifying the deeply-rooted habits that stem from our increased technological dependence? On an impoverished understanding of habit, the above questions are easily shrugged off. Habits are deemed rigid by definition: ‘as long as our deliberative selves remain capable of steering the design of data-intensive technologies, we’ll be fine’. To question this assumption, this book first articulates the way in which the habitual stretches all the way from unconscious tics to purposive, intentionally acquired habits. It also highlights the extent to which our habit-reliant, pre-reflective intelligence normally supports our deliberative selves. It is when habit rigidification sets in that this complementarity breaks down. The book moves from a philosophical inquiry into the ‘double edge’ of habit — its empowering and compromising sides — to consideration of individual and collective strategies to keep habits at the service of our ethical life. Allowing the norms that structure our forms of life to be cotton-wooled in abstract reasoning is but one of the factors that can compromise ongoing social and moral transformations. Systems designed to simplify our practical reasoning can also make us ‘sheep-like’. Drawing a parallel between the moral risk inherent in both legal and algorithmic systems, the book concludes with concrete interventions designed to revive the scope for normative experimentation. It will appeal to any reader concerned with our retaining an ability to trigger change within the practices that shape our ethical sensibility. The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by the Mozilla Foundation.Trade ReviewThe flow of thought is compelling, but it is also a dance of the intellect, where you need to stand back after each section to marvel at where it has taken you and is about to take you. * BJGP Life *Table of ContentsI. What is a Habit? II. The Habitual and the Ethical: Unhappy Marriage? III. Why Does ‘Habitual Ethics’ Matter Today? IV. Chapters Overview PART I HABIT AND INDIVIDUAL AGENCY 1. From Facts to Norms (and Back) I. Defining ‘the Natural’ (and the Role of Science) A. When ‘the Natural’ is Restricted to that which is the Result of Elementary Forces B. Inhabited Nature II. The ‘Motivation Problem’ III. ‘Following a Rule’ A. ‘Primitive Appropriateness’ B. Dispositions, the Possibility of Mistakes and ‘Primitive Inappropriateness’ 2. Habit and Skill Acquisition I. Skilful Coping and Skilful Action II. The Structure of the Environment and its Impact on Skill Acquisition A. The ‘Skilled Intuitions’ Stance B. The ‘Heuristics and Bias’ Stance C. Explaining Divergent Stances on Intuitive Expertise by Reference to the Structure of the Environment III. ‘Tacit’ Learning Attitude(s) A. Automaticity and Availability to Conscious Awareness B. Automaticity and Adaptability i. External Goal Adaptability ii. Adaptability of One’s Self-understanding 3. Routine and Rigidified Habits I. Teleologically Indeterminate Professional Encounters A. The Situational Vulnerability at the Heart of the Lay–Professional Encounter B. The Particular Responsibility that Stems from Lay Situational Vulnerability II. Humility and ‘Sophia’: Pre-Conditions of Habit Plasticity? III. Obstacles to Habit Plasticity in Professional Contexts A. Case Study B. The Emotional and Physiological Costs of Habit Reversal C. Balancing Model Stability and Habit Plasticity within the Learning Process 4. Growing Out of the Habitual I. Growing Out of the Habitual: Habit versus Reason II. When ‘Reason’ Shields Us from Normative Significance 5. Growing within the Habitual I. Responsiveness to Reasons A. Why ‘Reasons’? B. The Gap between ‘Reasons’ and Normative Significance II. Habit and the Work of Attention A. GP Consultation with Seemingly ‘Peripheral’ Child Safeguarding Concerns B. Imposing a Mental Defence in Criminal Law C. Seeing Past Habitual Salience and the Role of Personal Encounters III. Responsiveness to the Other: A Forgotten Capability? A. Selective Responsiveness and the Possibility of Immanent Critique B. A Pervasive – Yet Optimistic – ‘Mode of Being Ethical’? C. Compromised ‘Forms of Life’ PART II COLLECTIVE HABITS AND MORAL TRANSFORMATIONS 6. Law and Habits I. The Narrow View: The Step from ‘the Pre-Legal to the Legal’ A. Organically Grown Customs versus ‘Constitutive’ Practices B. Addressing a ‘Defective’ Form of Social Control Through ‘Official’ Rules C. Accounting for the Emergence of Law as a Normative Phenomenon II. Non-Deliberative Components within a Genealogy of Legal Normativity A. Habit Hostility B. Habit Ambivalence i. The Wittgensteinian Take on ‘Custom’ ii. The Weberian Narrative C. From Collective Patterns of Behaviour to Legal Norms III. The Types of Habits Law May Foster A. Qualitatively Different Habits B. Division of Normative Labour and its Moral Risks C. Legal Institutional Structures, Alienation Risks and Habit Rigidification 7. Algorithmic Habits and Social Transformations I. Inferred Traits and Optimisation Endeavours A. Profile-based, Personalised Optimisation Tools B. Manipulation as Hidden and Non-deliberative Interventions II. Precluded Transformations: Alienation Through Reification A. Narrowing of Imaginative Horizons B. Habitats and their Inherent Narrowing of Encountered Worldviews C. Habitat Co-construction and the Possibility of Experimentation III. Ensemble Contestability A. Case Study B. From ‘Passive’ and Individualist Explanations to Ensemble Contestability IV. Bottom-up Data Trusts
£85.50
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Lawyers and the Rule of Law
Book SynopsisThis book examines lawyers' contributions to creating and maintaining the rule of law, one of the pillars of a liberal democracy. It moves from the European Enlightenment to the modern day, exploring the role of judges, government lawyers, and private practitioners in creating, defining, and being defined by, the demands of modern society. The book is divided into 4 parts representing the big themes. The first part considers lawyers' contribution to the growth of constitutionalism, the second, the formulation of roles and identities, and the third the formation of values. The fourth part focuses on the challenges faced by lawyers and the rule of law in the past 50 years, the neoliberal period, and how they challenge both conceptions of lawyers and the rule of law. Each part is illustrated by defining events, from the execution of Charles I, through the Nuremberg Trials, to the insurrection by supporters of Donald Trump in January 2021. Although the focus is on England and Wales, parallel developments in other jurisdictions, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the USA, are considered. This allows analysis of lawyers' historical and contemporary engagement with the rule of law in jurisdictional systems based on the Common Law. Each chapter is thematic, but the passage through the book is broadly chronological.Trade ReviewLawyers and the Rule of Law is worth reading … the book has a respect for its subject – almost a reverence – which in this age of ‘polycrises’ is good to see. It engages and stimulates; it is not anodyne; it challenges us. -- John Flood * Journal of Law and Society *Table of Contents1. Lawyers and the Rule of Law PART 1 GOVERNMENT 2. Revolution 3. Constitution 4. Execution 5. Institution PART 2 PRACTICE 6. Identity 7. Individuality 8. Legality 9. Morality PART 3 PROFESSION 10. Organisation 11. Regulation 12. Representation 13. Incrimination PART 4 FUTURES 14. Professionalism 15. Corporatocracy 16. Globalisation 17. Democracy 18. Epilogue
£90.25
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC The Right to Be Protected from Committing Suicide
Book SynopsisThis book argues that suicidal people have the right to receive treatment and for reasonable steps to be taken that they are protected from killing themselves. Those suffering threats to life from mental health issues deserve the same protection as those who face threats to life from ill health or violence from others. The book explores the ethical and legal case for giving those beset with suicidal thoughts the treatment they need and for reasonable steps to be taken to prevent them attempting suicide. Debates around suicide tend to be dominated by cases involving those with terminal medical conditions seeking assisted dying. But of those wishing to die, it is far more common to find middle aged men and young people oppressed by mental health and personal problems. Too often the woeful failure in the funding of mental health services in the UK means that suicidal people are denied the support and help they desperately need. This ground-breaking book makes the legal and ethical case for recognising that the state and public authorities have a duty to provide and implement an effective suicide prevention strategy.Trade ReviewA characteristically thoughtful and elegant development of the legal and ethical case for treating those with suicidal thoughts, and the taking of reasonable steps to prevent them attempting suicide [the book is] a stimulating, important, and nuanced contribution to an area which can sometimes all too easily be portrayed in unhelpfully crude terms. -- Alex Ruck Keene * International Journal of Mental Health and Capacity Law *Table of Contents1. Introduction 2. The Definition of Suicide I. Introduction II. Popular and Official Definitions III. The Mental State IV. Causation V. Conclusion 3. The Causes of Suicide I. Introduction II. The Problems with Gathering Suicide Statistics III. International Statistics IV. Statistics for England and Wales V. Suicidal Feelings VI. Forms of Suicide VII. Seeking to Identify the Causes of Suicide VIII. Biological Theories IX. Sociological Theories X. Psychological Theories of Suicide XI. Mental Illness XII. Alcohol XIII. Religion XIV. Domestic Abuse XV. Social Inequalities XVI. Conclusion 4. Societal Responsibility for Suicide I. Introduction II. The Cultural Meaning of Suicide III. Social Causes of Suicide IV. Suicide and the Relational Self V. Means VI. Poverty VII. Gender VIII. Age and Suicide IX. Clusters X. Conclusion 5. Ethics and Suicide I. Introduction II. What is the Question? III. The Principle of Autonomy IV. Autonomy and Welfare V. Capacity, Autonomy and Suicide VI. Autonomy Issues: Limits VII. A Duty to Commit Suicide? VIII. Duties Towards the Suicidal: Drawing the Th reads Together IX. Conclusion 6. Human Rights and Suicide I. Introduction II. Rights and Duties III. The Positive Duty to Protect the Right to Life IV. Does Suicide Infringe the Right to Life? V. What Does the Duty Require? VI. The Universal General Duty VII. The Particular General Duty VIII. Specific Operational Obligations to those in the Care of the State IX. Breach of the Duty X. Duty to Investigate XI. United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities XII. Conclusion and the Way Ahead 7. The Current Law on Suicide I. Introduction II. Criminal Law Offences Prohibiting Suicide or Assisted Suicide III. Criminal Offences for Failing to Prevent Suicide IV. Mental Health Law V. Mental Capacity Law VI. Suicidal Children VII. Conclusion 8. Prevention of Suicide I. Introduction II. The Case for Prevention III. The Case against Suicide Prevention IV. Developing Suicide Prevention Policies V. Universal Interventions VI. Selective Interventions VII. Individual Interventions VIII. Problems in Preventing Suicide IX. Current Approach in the UK X. Conclusion 9. Euthanasia and Suicide I. Introduction II. The General Debate on Assisted Dying III. The Starting Point IV. The Right to Die V. Dealing with Hard Cases VI. False Positives and False Negatives VII. Conclusion and the Right to Die Debate 10. Conclusion
£85.50
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC The Ethics and Conduct of Lawyers in England and
Book SynopsisThe fourth edition of this respected textbook examines the regulation and conduct of lawyers in England and Wales and addresses new developments in the field, including those in international practice, sexual misconduct, and the environment. Focusing on the practice of, and interrelationship between, solicitors and barristers, the book provides background to current arrangements while exploring contemporary rules of conduct, systems of regulation, and controversies. The four main parts cover client duties, wider obligations, key contexts, and regulation. Parts one to three provide an academic introduction to the subject of lawyers’ ethics. They are suitable as a core text for a semester course at undergraduate level, providing grounding for vocational training, such as the Solicitors’ Qualifying Examination. Comparisons are made with conduct rules applying in other leading common law jurisdictions where relevant. These parts also explore links between the subject of ethics and the development of lawyers’ practical skills. Part four applies the general principles to three elements of regulation: practice, admission, and discipline. The approach throughout is socio-legal. While the essential law is described, relevant social science research informs consideration of issues and debates.Table of Contents1. Introduction Part One: Clients 2. Loyalty 3. Conflicts of Interest 4. Confidence Part Two: Wider Responsibilities 5. Social Responsibility 6. Individual Third parties 7. Collective Third parties Part Three: Contexts 8. Litigation 9. Business 10. International Part Four: Regulation 11. Practice 12. Admission 13. Discipline 14. Epilogue
£42.74
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Lawyers on Trial
Book SynopsisWhelan has written a book that anyone interested in the law should queue to buy. The Times (of the 1st edition)A classic work Michael Beloff KC, Former President, Trinity College Oxford, Treasurer, Gray's InnLawyers are universally unpopular, but is that justified? Aren''t lawyers necessary for justice? This book uses real-world examples, case studies, and commentary from practitioners to answer this question and to reveal the many and varied strategies American and English lawyers use to protect clients. It shows how lawyers tackle their conflicting duties, and highlights the choices lawyers everywhere routinely make through their power of decision.What emerges are new ways of understanding the critical role lawyers play in society and their professional responsibilities. This new edition considers the litigation surrounding Donald Trump and the role played by his lawyers. It includes a new chapter on SLAPPs and the way the
£23.74
Skyhorse Publishing The Fight Against Monsanto's Roundup: The
Book Synopsis
£16.14
Sage Publications Ltd Standards Ethics for Counselling in Action
Book SynopsisThis is your essential guide to standards and ethics in the psychological therapies. The book introduces you to key ethical values and principles and discusses how to practice in accordance with these. An accompanying online resource website provides you with over 30 videos showing commonly arising ethical dilemmas, further reading including book chapters and journal articles, and links to ethical codes and frameworks in the UK and internationally. Table of ContentsPart I The Background 1. Introduction 2. What Is Counselling? 3. Sources of Counselling Ethics 4. Framework for Counselling Ethics and Standards Part II Responsibility to the Client 5. Safety, Negligence and Insurance 6. Respect for Client Autonomy 7. Suicide and Refusing to Accept Life-saving Treatment 8. Counsellor Competence 9. Avoiding the Exploitation of Clients 10. Confidentiality 11. Counselling Online 12. Working with Social Diversity Part III The Counsellor and Others 13. Counsellors and the Responsibility to Others 14. Counselling Supervision 15. Record-keeping 16. Evaluation of Impact: Practice-based Evidence and Evidence-based Practice Part IV The Whole Picture 17. Ethical Problem Solving 18. Implications for Practice Glossary References
£32.29
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC The Law of Solicitors’ Liabilities
Book SynopsisThe Law of Solicitors' Liabilities, previously known as Solicitors' Negligence and Liability, provides a comprehensive guide to all aspects of solicitors’ negligence, liability in equity and wasted costs. Written by leading practitioners in the field, it deals with a variety of topics, from general principles to specific situations, providing practical guidance to the procedural aspects of bringing and defending a claim for solicitors’ negligence. The new fourth edition includes: - A new chapter on insurance law focusing on a number of key topics which arise, particularly in relation to solicitors’ insurance: aggregation; condonation; definition of private legal practice; notification; possibly successor practice rules. - Updated case law to cover all recent Supreme Court and Court of Appeal decisions, eg Hughes-Holland v BPE (Supreme Court) scope of duty and extent of damages; Redler v AIB (Supreme Court): breach of trust; Lowick Rose v Swynson (Supreme Court): lifting the corporate veil in claims against professionals; Tiuta International v de Villiers (Court of Appeal): lenders’ claims, impact of a remortgage on damages; Wellesley v Withers (Court of Appeal): test for remoteness of damage; and E Surv v Goldsmith Williams (Court of Appeal): implied duty on solicitors in lenders’ claims. - Regulatory/disciplinary developments, eg revised SRA Code of Conduct. This title is included in Bloomsbury Professional's Professional Negligence Law online service.Trade ReviewThis is a book which has gone from strength to strength. * The Commonwealth Lawyer *The book is both succinct and comprehensive, and I shall have no hesitation in making it my first port of call when required to research a knotty point about solicitors. * Gregory Treverton-Jones QC, The Law Society Gazette *Table of ContentsSection A Civil Law Claims Part 1 General Principles Chapter 1 The solicitor’s duties in contract and tort Chapter 2 Breach of duty Chapter 3 Causation and quantum of damages in contract and tort Chapter 4 Claims in equity Chapter 5 Authority, vicarious liability and undertakings Chapter 6 Solicitors’ duties of confidentiality Chapter 7 Limitation Chapter 8 Contributory negligence and contribution Part 2 Specific Claims Chapter 9 Real Estate Chapter 10 Lenders’ claims Chapter 11 Wills, estates and trusts Chapter 12 Litigation Part 3 Procedure Chapter 13 Costs orders against solicitors Chapter 14 Disclosure and privilege Section B Professional Regulation And Discipline Chapter 15 The regulation of solicitors Chapter 16 Disciplinary proceedings Chapter 17 Insurance
£194.75
Pan Macmillan Nothing But The Truth: The Memoir of an Unlikely
Book SynopsisFrom the Number One bestselling author, a memoir full of hilarious, personal and surprising stories from their working life in the law.* The Sunday Times Bestseller ** A BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week*‘The SB is a gifted writer. Words tumble out with extraordinary fluency . . . entertaining and instructive’ – The Times__________Just how do you become a barrister? Why do only 1 per cent of those who study law succeed in joining this mysteriously opaque profession? And why might a practising barrister come to feel the need to reveal the lies, secrets, failures and crises at the heart of this world of wigs and gowns?Nothing But The Truth is The Secret Barrister's bestselling memoir. It charts an outsider’s progress down the winding path towards practising at the Bar, taking in the sometimes absurd traditions of the Inns of Court, where every meal mandates a glass of port and a toast to the monarch, to the Hunger Games-style contest for pupillage, through the endlessly frustrating experience of being a junior barrister – as a creaking, ailing justice system begins to convince them that something has to change . . .Full of hilarious, shocking and surprising stories, Nothing But The Truth tracks the Secret Barrister’s transformation from hang ‘em and flog ‘em, austerity-supporting twenty-something to campaigning, bestselling, reforming author whose writing in defence of the law is celebrated around the globe. With a keen eye for the absurd and an obsessive fondness for Twitter, SB reveals the uncomfortable truths and darkest secrets about life in our criminal courts.__________‘With compassion, wit and intelligence, The Secret Barrister shows why is it that any of us plunge into the harrowing depths of criminal law’ – TLS‘Masterful, compassionate and hilarious’ – Adam Rutherford‘The Zorro of the criminal bar’ – The TimesTrade ReviewEntertaining and instructive . . . A gifted writer . . . The Secret Barrister's picaresque journey to barristerhood is served up with large helpings of humour * The Times *Wonderful and insightful . . . With compassion, wit and intelligence, the Secret Barrister shows why is it that any of us plunge into the harrowing depths of criminal law * TLS *Excellent . . . at once a vicious polemic, a helpful primer and a cringe-inducing account of one barrister’s travails * Telegraph *As entertaining as ever in this third foray into the courtroom * Radio Times *Eye-opening. The candour is, at times, breathtaking . . . it is both human and urgent . . . A no-holds-barred book that tells an unvarnished story of a broken system an the people who hold it together * Law Society's Gazette *As compelling and illuminating - and as full of gob-smacking stories - as its predecessors, it is also fascinatingly personal. Anyone thinking of a career in the law should certainly read it * Bookseller *
£17.00
Pan Macmillan Nothing But The Truth: The Memoir of an Unlikely
Book SynopsisJust how do you become a barrister? And why do only 1 per cent of those who study law succeed in joining this mysteriously opaque profession? If it’s such a great occupation, how come you work 100-hour weeks for less than minimum wage? And why might a practising barrister come to feel the need to reveal the lies, secrets, failures and crises at the heart of this world of wigs and gowns?Nothing But The Truth charts an outsider’s progress down the winding path towards practising at the Bar, taking in the sometimes absurd traditions of the Inns of Court, where every meal mandates a glass of port and a toast to the Queen, to the Hunger Games-type contest for pupillage, through the endlessly frustrating experience of being a junior barrister – as a creaking, ailing justice system begins to convince them that something has to change . . .Full of hilarious, shocking, and surprising stories from their working life, Nothing But The Truth tracks the Secret Barrister’s transformation from hang ‘em and flog ‘em, austerity-supporting twenty-something to campaigning, bestselling, reforming author whose writing in defence of the law is celebrated around the globe. It asks questions about what we understand by justice, and what it takes to change our minds. It also reveals the darker side of working in criminal law, and how the things our justice system gets wrong are not the things most people expect.Praise for the Secret Barrister . . .‘Dishes the dirt — or serves up a slice of reality — on what barristers do’ - The Times‘An illuminating and timely insight into the legal system . . . fascinating’ - Sunday Express‘Excellent . . . at once a vicious polemic, a helpful primer and a cringe-inducing account of one barrister’s travails’ - Daily Telegraph
£13.49
Nova Science Publishers Inc Data Collection: Methods, Ethical Issues & Future
Book Synopsis
£148.79
Rowman & Littlefield Policing and Public Trust: Exposing the Inner
Book SynopsisSince its inception in the late nineteenth century, the prevailing ethos of the police institution in Britain, has been said to rest on Sir Robert Peel’s mantra of 1829 that ‘the police are the public and the public are the police’. This refrain, of policing by consent, has constantly been challenged and no more so than in recent years. Whilst public views of policing in Britain maintain a constant level of trust, according to opinion polls, little attention is given as to why 40% of the population remain mistrustful of policing services. Though much of this book is confined to police operations in the United Kingdom, especially with regard to the narratives of those whose interviews were transcribed as case studies, the extent to which the modern police service sets itself apart from the public (and is therefore non-consensual) is shown in policing practices across the globe, from the United States to Australia. With stories from people on the front line, who have been targeted by police, Dr. Eccy de Jonge examines how police agencies’ self-referential attitude – their “inner uniform” – may lead to bias in policing investigations, a breakdown in social order, and a lack of public trust. This is exacerbated by police officers using their power of discretion to subdue a right to criticism. Victims and complainants are routinely discredited by policing agencies around the globe and the inner workings of this public institution are failing those who rely upon it the most.Table of ContentsChapter 1: Discrediting Victims and ComplainantsDiscrediting TacticsIdentifying the Subject HillsboroughAnti Social Behaviour: The Story of KayPolice AttitudesChapter 2: The Meaning of Bias in Police InvestigationsImplicit BiasConfirmation BiasThe Reid Technique Miscarriages of Justice and Wrongful ArrestAvoiding Bias: Resolutions and SuggestionsChapter 3: Covert PolicingSpycops Covert Records and Databases Police and Family Liaison OfficersCovert Diagnoses: Case Studies Chapter 4: Road Deaths Police Investigations into Road DeathsTestaments of Victims Policing AttitudesChapter 5: Police Support Networks Coroners, Inquests and PathologistsThe Crown Prosecution Service Case Study: A False Charge of RapeChapter 6: Accountability: A Grey AreaThe Police Complaints SystemRespondentsPublic RelationsPolicing CultureConclusion
£72.90
Rowman & Littlefield The Enablers: How the West Supports Kleptocrats
Book SynopsisAuthoritarian regimes in many countries, and the men that lead them, depend on the international management of licit and illicit funds under their control. Frank Vogl shows that curbing their activities for their kleptocratic clients is critical to secure democracy, enhance national security, and ensure international financial stability.Table of Contents1:Dirty Money 2:Then and Now3: The Scale of Grand Corruption4:Blind Bankers 5:Slumbering Regulators6:Klepto-Debt7:Klepto-Investing8:Secret Dealings 9:Corrupt Trade 10: Arms and Graft11: Democracy at Risk 12: Ticking the Boxes is Not Enough 13:Enforcement 14:In the Public Interest Selected Bibliography Acknowledgements Chapter Notes
£23.75
Aspen Publishing Regulation of Lawyers: Problems of Law and Ethics
Book Synopsis
£266.14
Aspen Publishing Professional Responsibility for Business Lawyers:
Book Synopsis
£302.10
Wolters Kluwer Law & Business The Law Governing Lawyers Model Rules Standards
Book Synopsis
£49.37
Aspen Publishing Examples & Explanations for Professional
Book Synopsis
£71.25
Aspen Publishing Ethical Problems in the Practice of Law
Book Synopsis
£272.00
Irwin Law Inc Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility
£25.65
St Augustine's Press Essays on Law, Religion, and Morality
Book SynopsisThe most controversial foundational issue today in both legal philosophy and constitutional law is the relationship between objective moral norms and the positive law. Is it possible for the state to be morally “neutral” about such matters as marriage, the family, religion, religious liberty, and – as the Supreme Court once famously phrased it – “the meaning of life”? If such neutrality is possible, is it desirable? In this volume of essays one of our country’s leading constitutional lawyers answers “no” to both questions. In the first three chapters, Gerard Bradley investigates the central moral justification of punishment, the morality of plea bargaining, and how the criminal justice system should treat the family. These essays reflect both Bradley’s decades as a teacher of criminal law as well as his earlier experience as a trial prosecutor in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office. The second triptych of papers has to do with the raging controversy over same-sex “marriage,” and the broader movement toward a socially sanctioned orthodoxy about sexual orientation of which the “marriage” movement is one part. These papers reflect the author’s years of philosophical work on the marriage question, as well as his more practical experience as a popular debater and expert witness. Finally, Bradley takes up the questions of religious liberty and how our democratic polity should treat religion. These chapters cover the original meaning of the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause, the role of Catholicism in the post-World War II controversies over movie censorship as they played out in the Supreme Court, and emerging challenges to religious liberty in the 21st century.
£20.00
Georgetown University Press The Ethics of Interrogation: Professional
Book SynopsisCan harsh interrogation techniques and torture ever be morally justified for a nation at war or under the threat of imminent attack? In the aftermath of the September 11, 2001, terrorist strikes, the United States and other liberal democracies were forced to grapple once again with the issue of balancing national security concerns against the protection of individual civil and political rights. This question was particularly poignant when US forces took prisoners in Afghanistan and Iraq who arguably had information about additional attacks. In this volume, ethicist Paul Lauritzen takes on ethical debates about counterterrorism techniques that are increasingly central to US foreign policy and discusses the ramifications for the future of interrogation. Lauritzen examines how doctors, lawyers, psychologists, military officers, and other professionals addressed the issue of the appropriate limits in interrogating detainees. In the case of each of these professions, a vigorous debate ensued about whether the interrogation policy developed by the Bush administration violated codes of ethics governing professional practice. These codes are critical, according to Lauritzen, because they provide resources for democracies and professionals seeking to balance concerns about safety with civil liberties, while also shaping the character of those within these professional guilds. This volume argues that some of the techniques used at Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere were morally impermissible; nevertheless, the healthy debates that raged among professionals provide hope that we may safeguard human rights and the rule of law more effectively in the future.Trade ReviewAn indispensable analysis of the need for strict and clear moral limits on what a human person may do in the so-called war against terrorism. America Magazine An important and pioneering book. Paul Lauritzen is to be commended for providing us with an insightful look into the ethical issues that are raised in the interrogation of suspected terrorists. New York Journal of BooksTable of ContentsIntroduction Part I1. If You Can't Oppose Torture, What Can You Oppose? Psychologists Confront Coercive Interrogations 2. What's Wrong with Supporting National Security? Psychology and the Pursuit of National Security 3. Interrogating Justice: The Torture Memos and the Office of Legal Counsel 4. Ticking Bombs and Dirty Hands: Coercive Interrogation and the Rule of Law Part II5. Treating Terrorists: The Conflicting Pull of Role Responsibility 6. Discipline and Punish: The Importance of Professional Accountability 7. Professional Responsibility and the Virtuous Professional 8. The Day They Enter Active Service: The Military Conscience 9. Lessons Learned: Dignity and the Rule of Law10. This We Do Not Do: The Future of Interrogation and the Ethics of Professional Responsibility Bibliography Index
£23.85
Prometheus Books Morality, Justice, and the Law: The Continuing
Book SynopsisWhat should society or individuals do when the compelling dictates of personal conscience conflict with the law? To what extent should lawyers and lawmakers be influenced by considerations of morality? Are there principles that go beyond legal jurisdiction to justify acts of civil disobedience? Is it right to violate the laws of society when they are opposed to personal moral convictions? Is it ever appropriate for religious considerations to influence lawyers or the law? Few questions have had and will continue to have a more compelling effect on the human community. For this reason the editors have brought together this collection of intellectually stimulating articles, which grapple with the tough issues involving morality, justice, and the law. Part One contains articles on the connection between morality and the law by such eminent thinkers as Oliver Wendell Holmes, Cass R. Sunstein, and others. Part Two focuses on issues of morality and lawyering by looking at such questions as how lawyers should represent clients with whom they disagree ethically and how criminal defence lawyers can represent guilty clients. This section also addresses the recent law and religion movement. Part Three addresses the question concerning when civil disobedience is justified and includes an important essay by Ronald Dworkin. Part Four explores moral and legal questions related to capital punishment and includes the Supreme Court's most recent decision on capital punishment, in which the majority and the dissent had radically different views. Finally, Part Five examines the highly charged debate about immigration. This balanced anthology will be of interest to philosophers, legal scholars, and anyone concerned about the relation of law to morality.Table of ContentsPart I: The Relationship Between Morality and the Law; Part II: Morality and Lawyering; Part III: Civil Disobedience: When is it Justified?; Part IV: Capital Punishment: Moral & Legal issues; Part V: Immigration: Moral and Legal Issues.
£15.99
Prometheus Books Ethics and the Legal Profession
Book SynopsisBeneficial for law or philosophy students, or practicing lawyers, Ethics and the Legal Profession includes articles by eminent philosophers and lawyers that explore moral problems in legal practice. The text is divided into six sections, each dealing with an important issue: The History and Organization of the Profession in the United States; The Moral Critique of Professionalism; The Adversary System; Conflict of Interest and Professional Judgment; Perjury and Confidentiality; and Making Legal Services Available. Combining in-depth case studies with careful analysis, the editors help students and professionals distinguish between moral and technical judgment, become clearer about the meaning of moral discourse in the workplace, and better appreciate the higher callings of their profession. Raising provocative questions about the rationale and limits of professional responsibility, this text provides insights into the ethics of the legal profession at a time when technology, globalization, and the changing economics of lawyering are reshaping the profession of law in ways still hard to predict.
£17.09
Foundation Press Morgan and Rotundas Selected Standards on
Book Synopsis
£43.65
£38.99
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Judges in Street Clothes: Acting Ethically
Book SynopsisTo maintain public confidence in the judiciary, judges are governed by the strictest of ethical codes. Codes of conduct not only circumscribe a judge’s official conduct but also restrict every aspect of a judge’s off-bench life. Judges in Street Clothes: Acting Ethically Off-the-Bench provides an in-depth analysis of the rules limiting the charitable, educational, religious, fraternal, civic, and law-related extrajudicial activities of state and federal judges. This comprehensive, heavily footnoted resource examines: (1) the historical development of the American Bar Association’s four model judicial codes with an emphasis on the rules regulating the charitable, educational, religious, fraternal, civic, and law-related activities of judges; (2) the State’s interests in restricting the extrajudicial activities of judges; (3) the strengths and weaknesses of rules governing a judge’s off-bench activities; (4) how state and federal courts, judicial disciplinary commissions, and judicial ethics advisory committees have interpreted judicial conduct rules; (5) best practices for judges; and (6) the constitutionality of the restrictions on a judge’s charitable, educational, religious, fraternal, civic, and law-related undertakings. From both a theoretical and practical standpoint, this book addresses the ethical implications of the everyday activities of judges. How far may a judge go in expressing personal opinions about social and legal issues? What are the limits on a judge’s use of social media? Is it permissible for a judge to receive an award from a victim advocacy group? Do the rules permit a judge to speak at a church or bar association’s fund-raising dinner? May judges teach prosecutors and law enforcement officials how to improve their job performance? May a judge appear in an informational video for the judge’s alma mater? Former judge Raymond J. McKoski discusses these and a host of other everyday situations judges face in their attempts to remain involved community members while promoting public confidence in the independence, integrity, and impartiality of the judiciary.Trade ReviewBecause the public must trust the fairness of the judicial system and because judges symbolize that system, they are required to behave ethically in their private lives. Since 1924, the American Bar Association has created four model codes of ethics, and every state now has a code based on one or another of them. Enforcement, typically by an appellate court, a disciplinary commission, or both, involves investigations, hearings, rulings, and written opinions justifying the rulings. McKoski, a retired Illinois circuit court judge who teaches at John Marshall Law School, mines the mass of accumulated documents and case law to present a systematic and comprehensive picture of what judges can ethically do in their off-duty hours. It covers family relationships, organization memberships, financial dealings, and much more. McKoski is thorough. Like most treatises, his book will be most valuable as a reference book…. Because regulating private behavior often involves limiting private rights—keeping a judge from joining a disreputable organization, for example, raises First Amendment issues—the book may have classroom utility in civil liberties courses. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Graduate students through professionals. * CHOICE *This exemplary contribution to the literature on judicial ethics fills a substantial void on the issue of extrajudicial activities that will be of immense value to judges and those scrutinizing them, including members of judicial disciplinary commissions, advisory panels, attorneys, and anyone interested in the issue of judicial ethics. * Legal Information Buyer's Guide and Reference Manual (2018) *Table of ContentsPreface 1 Preliminary Considerations 2 The State’s Interests in Restricting Extrajudicial Activities 3 The Evolution of Restrictions on the Extrajudicial Activities of Judges 4 Restrictions on the Law-Related, Educational, Religious, Charitable, Fraternal, and Civic Activities of Judges 5 Extrajudicial Activities and the First Amendment Index About the Author
£89.10
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Judges in Street Clothes: Acting Ethically
Book SynopsisTo maintain public confidence in the judiciary, judges are governed by the strictest of ethical codes. Codes of conduct not only circumscribe a judge’s official conduct but also restrict every aspect of a judge’s off-bench life. Judges in Street Clothes: Acting Ethically Off-the-Bench provides an in-depth analysis of the rules limiting the charitable, educational, religious, fraternal, civic, and law-related extrajudicial activities of state and federal judges. This comprehensive, heavily footnoted resource examines: (1) the historical development of the American Bar Association’s four model judicial codes with an emphasis on the rules regulating the charitable, educational, religious, fraternal, civic, and law-related activities of judges; (2) the State’s interests in restricting the extrajudicial activities of judges; (3) the strengths and weaknesses of rules governing a judge’s off-bench activities; (4) how state and federal courts, judicial disciplinary commissions, and judicial ethics advisory committees have interpreted judicial conduct rules; (5) best practices for judges; and (6) the constitutionality of the restrictions on a judge’s charitable, educational, religious, fraternal, civic, and law-related undertakings. From both a theoretical and practical standpoint, this book addresses the ethical implications of the everyday activities of judges. How far may a judge go in expressing personal opinions about social and legal issues? What are the limits on a judge’s use of social media? Is it permissible for a judge to receive an award from a victim advocacy group? Do the rules permit a judge to speak at a church or bar association’s fund-raising dinner? May judges teach prosecutors and law enforcement officials how to improve their job performance? May a judge appear in an informational video for the judge’s alma mater? Former judge Raymond J. McKoski discusses these and a host of other everyday situations judges face in their attempts to remain involved community members while promoting public confidence in the independence, integrity, and impartiality of the judiciary.Trade ReviewBecause the public must trust the fairness of the judicial system and because judges symbolize that system, they are required to behave ethically in their private lives. Since 1924, the American Bar Association has created four model codes of ethics, and every state now has a code based on one or another of them. Enforcement, typically by an appellate court, a disciplinary commission, or both, involves investigations, hearings, rulings, and written opinions justifying the rulings. McKoski, a retired Illinois circuit court judge who teaches at John Marshall Law School, mines the mass of accumulated documents and case law to present a systematic and comprehensive picture of what judges can ethically do in their off-duty hours. It covers family relationships, organization memberships, financial dealings, and much more. McKoski is thorough. Like most treatises, his book will be most valuable as a reference book…. Because regulating private behavior often involves limiting private rights—keeping a judge from joining a disreputable organization, for example, raises First Amendment issues—the book may have classroom utility in civil liberties courses. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Graduate students through professionals. * CHOICE *This exemplary contribution to the literature on judicial ethics fills a substantial void on the issue of extrajudicial activities that will be of immense value to judges and those scrutinizing them, including members of judicial disciplinary commissions, advisory panels, attorneys, and anyone interested in the issue of judicial ethics. * Legal Information Buyer's Guide and Reference Manual (2018) *Table of ContentsPreface 1 Preliminary Considerations 2 The State’s Interests in Restricting Extrajudicial Activities 3 The Evolution of Restrictions on the Extrajudicial Activities of Judges 4 Restrictions on the Law-Related, Educational, Religious, Charitable, Fraternal, and Civic Activities of Judges 5 Extrajudicial Activities and the First Amendment Index About the Author
£35.15
Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. You Should Not. a Book for Lawyers, Old and Young, Containing the Elements of Legal Ethics
£19.95
University of Akron Press International Journal of Ethical Leadership, Vol.
Book Synopsis
£14.20
University of Akron Press International Journal of Ethical Leadership,
Book Synopsis
£14.20
Nova Science Publishers Inc Whistleblowing by Federal Employees: Barriers &
Book Synopsis
£119.99
Nova Science Publishers Inc Whistleblowers: Selected Issues & Protections
Book Synopsis
£67.99
Nova Science Publishers Inc Whistleblower Protection & Retaliation Issues at
Book Synopsis
£155.99
Nova Science Publishers Inc Encyclopedia of Ethics: 5 Volume Set
Book SynopsisThis encyclopedia presents important research on ethics. The five set volume includes discussions on religious, spiritual, economic, political, medical, environmental, and business ethics.
£602.39
Nova Science Publishers Inc International Perspectives of Multiculturalism:
Book Synopsis
£148.79
Nova Science Publishers Inc U.S. Military Medical Professionals: Ethical
Book Synopsis
£120.79
American Bar Association Ethical Standards in the Public Sector: A Guide
Book SynopsisThis compilation of essays, articles and research provides a clear and concise overview of many of the complexities of public sector ethics, including post-employment restrictions on government employees, whistle-blowing, pro bono work, regulation of honoraria, royalties and travel reimbursements, financial disclosure filing requirements, gift giving, conflicts of interest, and issues in enforcement of local ethics law.
£107.75