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Lawyers and Fidelity to Law Book

Lawyers and Fidelity to Law
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  • Lawyers and Fidelity to Law
  • Written by author W. Bradley Wendel
  • Published by Princeton University Press, 8/26/2012
  • Even lawyers who obey the law often seem to act unethically—interfering with the discovery of truth, subverting justice, and inflicting harm on innocent people. Standard arguments within legal ethics attempt to show why it is permissible to do something a
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Acknowledgments ix

Introduction 1

Chapter One: The Standard Conception, For and Against 17

1.1 Introduction: Law, Morality, Ethics, and Legal Ethics 17

1.2 Ordinary and Professional Moralities 20

1.3 The Standard Conception 29

1.4 Traditional Justifications for the Standard Conception and Moral Critiques 31

1.4.1 Client Autonomy 31

1.4.2 Partiality to Clients and the Value of Dignity 37

1.5 Simon's Legalist Critique of the Standard Conception 44

Chapter Two: From Partisanship to Legal Entitlements Putting the Law Back into Lawyering 49

2.1 Lawyers as Agents 49

2.1.1 Legal, Not Moral, Rights 54

2.1.2 Rights, Not Power 59

2.2 Legal Ethics as Interpretation 66

2.2.1 Loophole Lawyering 66

2.2.2 Mistakes, Institutional Malfunctions, and Windfalls 72

2.2.3 A Note on "Zealous" Representation 77

2.2.4 Legal Uncertainty and Lawyering Roles 81

Chapter Three: From Neutrality to Public Reason Moral Conflict and the Law 86

3.1 Legality and Legitimacy 86

3.2 The Circumstances of Politics 89

3.2.1 Disagreement and the Need for Settlement 92

3.2.2 Rough Equality and Tolerably Fair Procedures 98

3.3 Moral Reasons and Legal Obligation 105

3.3.1 Obligation, Authority, and Exclusionary Reasons 107

3.3.2 Presumptive or Conclusive Obligations? 113

Chapter Four: Legal Entitlements and Public Reason in Practice 122

4.1 Disobedience and Nullification 123

4.1.1 Civil Disobedience and Conscientious Objection 124

4.1.2 Legal Permissions vs. Legal Duties 125

4.1.3 Lawyering for Change 129

4.1.4 Nullification and Subversion 131

4.2 Morally Grounded Client Counseling 135

4.3 Morally Motivated Client Selection 143

Chapter Five: From Nonaccountability to Tragedy The Remaining Claims of Morality 156

5.1 The Ideal of Innocence 156

5.2 Harmonizing the Demands of Role and Personal Integrity: The "Incorporationist" Solution 159

5.3 The Problem of Dirty Hands 169

Chapter Six: Legal Ethics as Craft 176

6.1 The Case of the Torture Memos 177

6.2 Interpretive Judgment 184

6.3 The Jurisprudence of Lawyering 194

6.4 Some Legal-Interpretive Puzzles 200

6.4.1 Enforcement Practices and Legal Interpretation 200

6.4.2 Negotiated Compliance and the Endogeneity of Law 203

Conclusion 208

Notes 213

Bibliography 269

Index 283


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