04697oam 2200625I 450 991082251600332120240131194648.01-84314-818-81-135-32832-31-135-32831-510.4324/9781843148180 (CKB)3710000000636219(EBL)4500488(SSID)ssj0001646010(PQKBManifestationID)16417617(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001646010(PQKBWorkID)12108303(PQKB)10813784(MiAaPQ)EBC4500488(Au-PeEL)EBL4500488(CaPaEBR)ebr11202072(CaONFJC)MIL911911(OCoLC)946724749(OCoLC)950005301(FINmELB)ELB132566(EXLCZ)99371000000063621920180331e20122004 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrEthics of the legal profession a new order /Sir Fred PhillipsLondon ;New York :Routledge,2012.1 online resource (202 p.)First published in 2004 by Cavendish Publishing Limited.1-85941-963-1 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Foreword; Acknowledgments; Table of Contents; Table of Abbreviations; 1 A Crisis in Legal Ethics; Excess of lawyers; Greater consciousness; Governments' intervention; Business v profession; The English position; Canada; The United States of America; How the Third World copes with the crisis; Concluding remarks; 2 The Law - A Business Rather than a Profession?; Introduction; Law firms; Novel business ways of delivery; For-profit plans; Prepaid legal plans; Permissibility of these plans; Canadian plans; Position in the CaribbeanEngland and WalesConclusion; 3 Access to Justice; Fundamental obstacle; Constitutional development; The world economic order changes; The effect of the legislative changes; What changes have taken place with legal aid overseas?; How lack of resources obstructs; Fee structure; Contingency fees; Canadian courts lead the way; What are the arguments in favour of contingency fees?; The future of access to justice in the case of hard-pressed governments; Concluding comments; 4 Immunity from Suit; Rondel v Worsley; Saif Ali v Mitchell; Irony in the history of immunity from suit; Hall v SimonsConcluding comments with special reference to the application of Hall v Simons to developing countries5 Professional Responsibility of Lawyers; Introductory remarks; Basis of contractual liability; Concurrent liability in contract and tort; The impulse to do practical justice in lawyers' liability; Breaches of trust; How duties of a solicitor are to be carried out; Remoteness and foreseeability; Further relations between lawyer and client; Identity of the client; Concluding summary; 6 Wasted Costs; Is the wasted costs jurisdiction justifiable or practicable?; Basis of jurisdictionFurther case law on the subject in England, New Zealand and CanadaConclusion; 7 Confidentiality and Legal Professional Privilege; (A) Confidentiality in general; (B) Legal professional privilege; (C) Concluding summary: application of the rules to developing countries; 8 Conflicts of Interest and Chinese Walls; The history and background; The nature of the interest; Scope of this review; Concluding remarks, with special reference to conflict in Third World countries; 9 Self-Regulation and Discipline in the Profession; Introductory remarks; Part I - self-regulation; Part II - disciplinePart III - judicial codesConcluding summary; 10 Ethics of the Criminal Process; Respective functions of prosecutor and defence counsel; When may defence counsel withdraw his services?; Duty of confidentiality; Does counsel deliver justice?; The ethics of the English system; The position overseas; How do the ethics of the defence attorney stand in newly-independent countries?; The prosecution; Functions of prosecutors; Who prosecutes? To whom responsible?; The fairness of the trial; Police powers vis-à-vis suspects and persons charged; Negotiated justice; The jury; Concluding comments11 Alternative Dispute ResolutionLegal ethicsLegal ethics.174.309729Phillips FredSir,1918,1702044MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910822516003321Ethics of the legal profession4086283UNINA