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Books > Law > Jurisprudence & general issues > Legal profession > General
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger PublishingA AcentsAcentsa A-Acentsa Acentss Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and hard-to-find books with something of intere
This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Legacy Reprint Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive selection of rare historical book reprints, we have chosen to reproduce this title even though it may possibly have occasional imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other reproduction issues beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting, preserving and promoting the world's literature.
An Immigration Paradox develops when American immigration policy is subjected to Government benign neglect. Additionally, although frequently used by many in the public, the word "illegal" is technically not recognized as a legal term in American immigration law as it applies to people. Surprised? Read further. Immigration has always been a controversial, complex, and very important issue historically in American public policy. In fact, the historic and fundamental importance of immigration in American culture, in combination with the increasing controversy and inevitably complexities involving it, has created inevitable the above-referenced immigration paradox. This book presents an overview of American immigration history, trends, policies and practices, and addresses the "paradox" issue from the perspective of a former United States Immigration Judge. Nothing written in this book is intended or designed in any way to diminish, malign, or disparage any person, group, country, organization, institution, or people. This important book contains "Fifteen (15) Tips for Winning Immigration Cases."
Hacking The LSAT is the first book to offer good, easy to read explanations for every LSAT in the Next Ten Actual Official LSATs (LSATs 29-38). Often, there are LSAT questions you just can't figure out. This book helps you read the minds of the test-writers, and see why each answer is right or wrong. You'll also find step by step diagrams for every Logic Game, and you'll see the conclusion and reasoning every argument in the Logical Reasoning Section. Whether you are a beginner or an advanced student, this book helps you fix your mistakes, so you won't make them on test day. It's an essential part of your LSAT prep arsenal. Books like the Powerscore Bibles give you general guidance, but this book will guide you through *every* individual question. Using Hacking The LSAT is like studying with an elite LSAT tutor, for a fraction of the price. Note: These explanations are a supplement to the LSAT. You'll need your own copy of the Next Ten Actual Official LSATs to use these explanations. Hacking The LSAT comes in two volumes. This is volume II, covering LSATs 34-38.
Have you ever been so incensed by injustice and prejudice that you just had to do something about it? I wish I had been warned of the futility of fighting to see my son in the English Family courts and the incredible emotional and financial toll I would face. This book explains what happened to me and how I found the system worked in reality. I never realised how the fecklessness of so many of the professionals involved rendered the system so biased. I have included some passages from my diary as background. As well as criticism I offer ideas to improve the system. For those fathers facing a similarly determined obstructive mother I hope this account will be helpful.
DON'T ASSUME THEY WIN - even if you're behind on the mortgage payments. If you or someone you know is threatened with foreclosure, you need this book. Missed mortgage payments do not necessarily mean that you're in default, or that your opponent has the right to take your home. FIGHTING THE FORECLOSURE MACHINE explains in plain language how borrower protections of fairness are embedded in the foreclosure laws of every state. Learn how you can use these laws as a powerful weapon in your fight to defend your home. Use this information to assess whether a foreclosure lawsuit is best for you. If you decide to fight back, this is a litigation resource with legal references, examples and forms to help you and your legal advisor avoid time-consuming and costly duplication of legal research and analysis.
Halloween Law is a spirited guide through law school study starting with that first scary year. Looking at the law through the lens of Halloween proves the old rule that truth is stranger than fiction. Halloween cases that conjure up issues in constitutional law, criminal law, tort law, property law and contract law introduce you to the first year curriculum. If you survive the first year, you can move on to several upper level courses for those who dare --- employment law, oil and gas law and lots of local government law creep into the Halloween Law experience. Halloween Law will leave you ready to deal with any case from the crypt. Halloween Law --- now that's the spirit
Legal Duties of Fiduciaries examines the structure, principles, themes and objectives of fiduciary law. Law is populated by fiduciaries. They appear in contract, tort, corporate law, agency, partnership, criminal law, environmental law, employment law, property and procedure, and constitutional law. Like family members, fiduciaries are similar yet distinct. Rarely are fiduciaries viewed as a group in a systematic manner. The purpose of this book is to study them together and examine fiduciary law's reach and its limits as one category.
Each year, thousands of men and women make a decision that will ultimately change not only the course but the quality of the rest of their lives: they decide to become lawyers. From the moment that thick congratulatory envelope arrives, accepting and welcoming them to law school, they begin their journey down a road they hope will lead them to a life of worth and personal satisfaction. Unfortunately, for most of them, this road leads only to misery and despair which oftentimes plummets to depths that eventually cause them to leave the practice of law or, more often, remain, resigned to spend their entire professional lives working for people they do not like and on issues for which they have no interest. The Happy Lawyer Handbook is out to change all that, examining the roots of this phenomenon and providing practical advice for law students and young attorneys in how they can avoid this in their legal careers. The Happy Lawyer Handbook provides insight into those practicalities of law practice that are never discussed in the career services office but which will very likely have an overwhelming effect on the entirety of a budding attorney's career. For example, the dangers of being pigeonholed and trapped into practicing in an unsatisfying area of law are discussed as a way of stressing the importance of choosing one's preferred area of practice right out of law school. Once in the workplace, competition among fellow law firm associates and issues relevant to promotion is analyzed in order to provide a better understanding of who gets promoted and why. Intrinsic in this discussion is the importance of job satisfaction right off the bat as a required tool for career advancement. The topic of student loan debt and how to deal with it is likewise a focus of The Happy Lawyer Handbook. Far too many students and young attorneys permit their fears over their student loans to dominate their career decisions, causing them to accept employment positions they otherwise would never even consider, thereby dooming themselves to a lifetime of professional misery. The Happy Lawyer Handbook shows them how to make sense of their student loan obligations, how to put their debt in the proper perspective, and how to avoid falling into a disastrous career spiral. Should young attorneys strive to retire their student loan debt as quickly as possible? Surprisingly, and contrary to popular opinion, The Happy Lawyer Handbook demonstrates how and why this is perhaps the worst thing he or she should do. On a larger economic scale, the book discusses how the combination of new technology and the recent recession has changed the legal employment marketplace forever. It shows readers how to make sense of it all and points out the hidden upsides to seeking legal employment in a down economy. As The Happy Lawyer Handbook shows, it is possible for savvy legal job seekers to use the current fragile economic climate to their advantage to secure the job of their dreams. The key is in understanding the new rules of the job search game. Readers of The Happy Lawyer Handbook will not only learn these rules but, more importantly, learn how to make them work to their advantage.
With Some Account Of Conditions In England And Canada.
"Profit and the Practice of Law - What's happened to the Legal Profession" has emerged as the definitive work on growth and change in the major business practice law firms in America between 1960 and 1995. It explains why and how America's major firms were transformed, and how the transformation has affected the lawyers in those firms, their clients, and the lawyers working in-house for such clients. The changes that occurred in the United States have also occurred in other countries around the world as widely diverse as the United Kingdom and Taiwan. The book has been widely praised by prominent lawyers, bar association leaders, law firm consultants and legal scholars. It's also readable by and entertaining to lay readers. The book considers many of the problems with the delivery of legal services faced by clients, corporate counsel, and private practice lawyers and law firms and suggests solutions to them. The problems that existed in the mid-1990s are still with us today and some are even worse now than then. The remedies suggested remain relevant. Young people considering a career in the law as well as career counselors and advisors will find valuable advice concerning the prospects for a satisfying and profitable career as a lawyer. New lawyers will acquire insights into the obstacle courses they face and how they can be traversed. Older lawyers will gain a better understanding of the dynamics they need to master in order to achieve success in their careers, and retired lawyers will find a structure to support their analysis and understanding of their own careers as practicing lawyers. "Profit and the Practice of Law" will also be of interest to business executives interested in containing their legal costs and anyone interested in the life of lawyers in the major American firms or the role of the legal profession in America's business and economic life. Trotter's new book, "Declining Prospects - How Extraordinary Competition and Compensation Are Changing America's Major Law Firms," focuses on growth and change in the major business practice law firms between 1995 and 2012 and has been cited in recent articles in "Business Week," the "New York Times," and "Managing Partner" magazine. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Michael H. Trotter received his law degree from the Harvard Law School in 1962, and his B.A. degree from Brown University cum laude (Phi Beta Kappa) in 1958. Prior to attending law school he was a Woodrow Wilson Fellow in the Harvard University Ph.D. Program in American History and was awarded a Master's Degree in History in 1959. Mr. Trotter's studies of law firm growth and change have combined the perspectives of a successful practicing attorney, an experienced law firm manager and a historian. As a partner in two of the largest and most successful firms in America (the predecessors of Alston & Bird and of Kilpatrick, Townsend & Stockton) and three entrepreneurial law firms, he has been a keen student of the economics and ethos of modern law practice. Mr. Trotter has written and spoken frequently on law firm management, operations and economics and the cost-effective delivery of legal services. He has also been a columnist for Atlanta's legal newspaper, "The Daily Report," and he is the author of "Pig in a Poke? The Uncertain Advantages of Very Large and Highly Leveraged Law Firms in America," which appeared as a chapter in the American Bar Association's publication, "Raise the Bar - Real World Solutions for a Troubled Profession" (2007). His courses in law firm management and economics at the Emory University School of Law in the early 1990s may have been the first, and were certainly among the first, to be taught at a major American law school. He is a partner in the "New Model" law firm of Taylor English Duma LLP.
A Report Prepared For The Survey Of The Legal Profession.
It was a hot August day in 1920 when a man rode on horseback away from his forty-acre Arkansas farm to fetch a doctor. His son, Gerald Brown, was about to be born. A short time later as he gazed at the tiny baby in his arms, he had no idea that Gerald would one day be the first in his family to graduate high school and college-eventually becoming become a trial lawyer and a state Supreme Court judge. In his compelling narrative that details his fascinating life story, Gerald shares a chronological glimpse into what it was like to grow up on a farm where his father plowed with mules. He attended a one-room school, rode a work horse seven miles to high school, and took a bath only one night a week. Even as the devastation of the Great Depression loomed around him, Gerald nurtured a dream to become something more-a dream that led him to serving as a marine in World War II and later attending college on the GI Bill. "The Clod-Hoppin' Judge: Memoirs of Judge Gerald Parker Brown" is the inspirational story of how an Arkansas farm boy overcame insurmountable odds to achieve professional success and personal fulfillment.
Written over 80 years ago, but highly relevant today, "The Bramble Bush" remains one of the books most recommended for students to read when considering law school, just before beginning its study, or early in the first semester. Its first edition began as a collection from a series of introductory lectures given by legal legend Karl Llewellyn to new law students at Columbia University. It still speaks to law, legal reasoning, and exam-taking skills in a way that makes it a classic for each new generation. The new Quid Pro "Legal Legends" Edition includes an extensive 2012 Introduction by Stewart Macaulay, a senior law professor at the University of Wisconsin. Macaulay updates the modern reader on the book's current relevance and application, offers a practical perspective to new law students, and places the original edition in its historical context. Simply put, Macaulay writes, this "is a book that anyone interested in law schools or law should read." Llewellyn's pointed and clear explanations of case briefing before class, visualization of case facts, active learning in class, the use of precedent, exam formats, and the limits of logic have proved timeless and highly practical. They remain excellent advice for current students to consider and implement in their own journey into the law. This is no Chamber of Commerce speech of mere platitudes about law practice and the grandeur of the bar. To be sure, Llewellyn believed in law school and legal education, and in dreaming big about a life in the law. But he was-famously-a realist above all, and this book gets to the nuts and bolts of studying law successfully in traditional legal education. Whether from the enduring nature of his hands-on advice, or from the reality that the first year of law study and its classroom method simply have not changed very much over the years, the book remains, by all accounts, targeted to the way 'thinking like a lawyer' continues in the modern law school. Now in a high-quality new edition from Quid Pro, "The Bramble Bush" is part of the "Legal Legends" Series. It features embedded page numbers from the previous, standard print editions-for continuity of assignments and referencing. Our production uses hyperaccurate checking against the original source-avoiding the misquotes, distracting formatting errors, and omissions common in such reissued classics, even from well-known presses. Only the Quid Pro versions offer these features (even if this description may appear under other publishers' used or new books, or customer reviews that decry the poor quality of other reprintings). Also in the Series, look for explained and introduced new editions of such classic works as Holmes' "The Common Law" (called "The Annotated Common Law," with some 200 simple annotations to decode Holmes and the law he famously describes); Cardozo's "The Nature of the Judicial Process" (with extensive introduction by his premier biographer, Harvard Law's Andrew Kaufman); and Holmes' "The Path of the Law" and Warren & Brandeis' "The Right to Privacy" (both introduced by Steven Alan Childress of Tulane Law School).
No solo attorney or aspiring freelance lawyer should be without The Freelance Lawyering Manual. Packed with practical information, advice, and tips for lawyers struggling in a tight market, this book is a must for attorneys who crave more compensation, flexibility, and fulfillment in their careers. It shows solo and small firm attorneys how to use the freelance market to dramatically increase revenue and maximize efficiency, and aspiring freelance lawyers how to build freelance firms without large initial investments. Whether you're a practicing attorney or an aspiring freelance lawyer, The Freelance Lawyering Manual is the only book with the blueprint you need to make the freelance law market work for you.
Enlightened Reasoning Between the covers of this book, the reader will be taken along on one woman's journey, from poverty through crisis, to loss and rebirth of her faith. Elize Lemieux has gained the courage to share with us the many hills and valleys of her life. These include the loss of a newborn and the estrangement of her daughters. Integral to all of her stories is her recovery from the ills of alcoholism and bipolar disorder. Perhaps the most poignantly is the love and learning she has shared with her son with Autism. These pages illustrate in bright colors the metamorphosis of an underprivileged young girl from Northern Ontario, who through determination and resilience became a successful woman now living life joyfully. She writes, "Where once I could only see darkness, pain, suffering and fear, I now see a vastness of light." Of course no one accomplishes such a transition alone. In her prose, she gives thanks and profound gratitude too many - her beloved mother and loving sisters, her dear friends and spiritual guides and of course, the lilacs. Here are stories of tragedy, magic, compassion and everything else one experiences on the path to wisdom and acceptance.
Clarence Darrow is best remembered as the defense attorney in some of the most famous (and infamous) cases in American legal history. With his brilliant closing argument that saved the thrill killers Leopold and Loeb from the gallows and his impassioned defense of John T. Scopes's right to teach evolution in the classroom, Darrow became a legend even in his own time. But such a towering reputation often obscures the man behind it, and attempts to shoehorn him into a single political party due to his long association with the labor movement have only further muddled his legacy. As the historian Andrew E. Kersten shows in this insightful biography of America's most celebrated lawyer, neither Darrow's courtroom performances nor his politics define his career or enduring importance. Going well beyond the familiar story of the socially conscious lawyer and drawing upon new archival records, Kersten reveals that Darrow was an iconoclast driven by the rising interference of corporations and government in ordinary working Americans' lives. In the face of the country's inexorable march toward modernity, Darrow dedicated himself to smashing systems of social control, fighting for liberty and individualism everywhere he went.
This biography of Joseph Henry Lumpkin (1799-1867) details the life and work of the man whose senior judgeship on Georgia's Supreme Court spanned more than twenty years and included service as its first Chief Justice. Paul Hicks portrays Lumpkin as both a civic-minded professional and an evangelical Presbyterian reformer. Exploring Lumpkin's important contributions to the institutional development of the Georgia Supreme Court, Hicks discusses Lumpkin's opinions in cases ranging in concern from family conflicts to slavery. He also shows how Lumpkin cleared a way through the thicket of antiquated laws that threatened to strangle the growth of corporate banking and business in Georgia. Treated in depth as well are the evolution of his views on slavery and secession and his involvement in social and economic reform, including temperance, education, African American colonisation, and industrialisation. Hicks also covers Lumpkin's undergraduate days at the University of Georgia and Princeton, his experiences as a state legislator and successful lawyer, and his family life. Among the family members portrayed are Lumpkin's older brother, Wilson, a two-term governor of Georgia; and Lumpkin's son-in-law, Thomas R. R. Cobb, cofounder with Lumpkin of the University of Georgia Law School. Joseph Henry Lumpkin played an important role in the public life of Georgia during the formative era of American law and the age of sectionalism. Here is a full and compelling portrait of Lumpkin as an individual of both intellect and passion, on and off the bench.
Winner of the "Los Angeles Times" Book Prize for Biography |
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