1 / 33

Question 8-1 (p. 796) The dominant conception of the lawyer's role: rejects role morality.

Question 8-1 (p. 796) The dominant conception of the lawyer's role: rejects role morality. endorses moral accountability. endorses moral nonaccountability . views a lawyer primarily as an officer of the court. Question 8-2 (p. 797)

finney
Download Presentation

Question 8-1 (p. 796) The dominant conception of the lawyer's role: rejects role morality.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Question 8-1 (p. 796) The dominant conception of the lawyer's role: rejects role morality. endorses moral accountability. endorses moral nonaccountability. views a lawyer primarily as an officer of the court.

  2. Question 8-2 (p. 797) • Role morality requires lawyers to take actions that are immoral under ordinary morality. • True • False

  3. Question 8-3 (p. 797) • Which of the following is NOT a justification for the hired gun role? • The adversary system. • The traditional understanding of professionalism • Client autonomy. • Democracy and access to law.

  4. Question 8-4 (p. 799) • The Preambles to the Canons and the Code emphasize the lawyer's responsibilities to his or her client. • True • False

  5. Question 8-5 (p. 799) • The original understanding of the lawyer's role in the United States was that of the European guild. • True • False

  6. Question 8-6 (p. 799) • The Rules: • require lawyers to be amoral partisans. • prohibit lawyers from being amoral partisans. • permit lawyers discretion to choose whether to be morally responsible or an amoral partisan.

  7. Question 8-7 (p. 800) • The Tennessee ethics opinion advises a lawyer opposed to abortion that his ethical obligations require him, in representing a minor seeking judicial consent for an abortion: • to suggest that she consider talking to her parents. • to suggest that she consider alternatives to abortion. • to suggest that she consider the moral pros and cons of her decision • none of the above.

  8. Question 8-8 (p. 800) • The Tennessee ethics opinion is consistent with Rule 2.1. • True • False

  9. Question 8-9 (p. 800) • The Legal Profession as a Blue State reading argues that the ascendance of the hired gun approach and the decline of • lawyers' commitment to the public good results from: • increasing business-like behavior by lawyers • law schools' disdain of law practice and legal ethics. • the trend toward greater emphasis on individualism. • the increasing diversity of the legal profession.

  10. Question 8-10 (p. 800) • The adversary system approach to justice resembles market theory in that it: • rejects moral relativism. • distributes justice equally. • always favors the wealthy. • assumes that facilitating the pursuit of individual self-interest is best for society

  11. Question 8-11 (p. 815) • Which of the following statements is true? • The Rules prohibit morally responsible lawyering • The Rules require morally responsible lawyering • The Rules permit a lawyer's discretion to be morally responsible in deciding whether to represent a client, counsel a client, • and deciding whether to withdraw from representing a client.

  12. Question 8-12 (p. 815) • Which of the following statements is true? • Both David Luban and William Simon urge lawyers to bring extralegal morality into their work. • Neither David Luban nor William Simon urge lawyers to bring extralegal morality into their work. • David Luban urges lawyers to bring extralegal morality into their work. • William Simon urges lawyers to bring extralegal morality into their work.

  13. Question 8-13 (p. 816) • Which author expressly suggests that evading the spirit of the law might be more appropriate in representing a low income • person than a wealthy corporation? • David Luban • William Simon • Both David Luban and William Simon • Neither David Luban nor William Simon

  14. Question 8-14 (p. 827) • Which of the following is true? • Catherine MacKinnon and Carrie Menkel-Meadow define a feminist lawyer as primarily a supporter of women's causes. • Catherine MacKinnon defines a feminist lawyer as primarily a supporter of women's causes • Carrie Menkel-Meadow defines a feminist lawyer as primarily a supporter of women's causes • Neither Catherine MacKinnon nor Carrie Menkel-Meadow define a feminist lawyer as primarily a supporter of women's causes

  15. Question 8-15 (p. 827) • Carrie Menkel-Meadow's approach to feminist lawyering relies primarily upon: • women's rights • women's support for individualism • women's understanding of relationships • women's superiority to men

  16. Question 8-16 (p. 828) • Under Menkel-Meadow's approach, a man could be a feminist lawyer. • True • False

  17. Question 8-17 (p. 828) • Menkel-Meadow suggests that feminist lawyering has implications for: • the lawyer-client relationship • ethics rules • the legal workplace • all of the above

  18. Question 8-18 (p. 837) • According to Professor Sanford Levinson, the dominant understanding of professionalism requires a lawyer to "bleach out" all personal characteristics, including religion, morality, race, gender, and other forms of identity. • True • False

  19. Question 8-19 (p. 837) • Under all of Professor Allegretti's models, a Christian lawyer must bring her religious values into her work as a lawyer. • True • False

  20. Question 8-20 (p. 837) • In her work at a large law firm, Professor Azizah al-Hibri found which area of practice most consistent with her values as a • Muslim? • Litigation • Corporate transactions • Securities Regulation • Trust and Estates

  21. Question 8-21 (p. 837) • According to Professor Russell Pearce, all the streams of Judaism: • agree that a Jew must bring her religion into her work. • agree that a Jew must bring her religion into her work but only to the extent of observing Jewish holidays. • reject the notion that a Jew must bring her religion into her work. • take different positions with regard to the basic principle that a Jew must bring her religion into her work.

  22. Question 8-22 (p. 838) • Professor Robert Vischer identifies the following as irrefutable objections to religious lawyering: • the threat to client autonomy • the threat to publicly accessible norms • the threat of illiberal communities • All of the above

  23. Question 8-23 (p. 873) • Anthony Griffin argues that: • as an African-American he had an obligation to represent the Klan. • as an African-American he had an obligation to refuse to represent the Klan. • his being African-American was irrelevant to his decision to represent the Klan.

  24. Question 8-24 (p. 873) • According to David Wilkins, African-American lawyers: • should place their professional obligations above their racial obligation. • should place their racial obligation above their professional obligation. • should reconcile their professional and racial obligations. • have no legitimate racial obligation.

  25. Question 8-25 (p. 874) • David Wilkins argues that in the O.J. Simpson trial: • Johnnie Cochran appropriately navigated racial and professional obligations. • Christopher Darden appropriately navigated racial and professional obligations. • Both Cochran and Darden appropriately navigated racial and professional obligations. • Neither Cochran nor Darden appropriately navigated racial and professional obligations.

  26. Question 8-26 (p. 874) • David Wilkins concludes that Robert Johnson managed his opposition to the death penalty: • more appropriately than Robert Morgenthau. • just as appropriately as Robert Morgenthau • less appropriately than Robert Morgenthau.

  27. Question 8-27 (p. 891) • In the 1960s, Erwin Smigel found that big firm lawyers viewed their role as closer to that of the: • Civics teacher • Hired gun

  28. Question 8-28 (p. 892) • Proponents of the lawyer as civics teacher argue that lawyers are properly civics teachers because they are necessarily more • virtuous than non-lawyers. • Yes • No

  29. Question 8-29 (p. 892) • Proponents argue that lawyers are civics teachers: • because descriptively they serve that function • because normatively they should serve that function • both A and B • neither A nor B

  30. Question 8-30 (p. 892) • A lawyer acting as civics teacher would always: • spy on her client for the government • be a hired gun because the system requires it • explain the spirit of the law as well as the letter • impose her values on the client

  31. Question 8-31 (p. 892) • Both perspectives on the lawyer as civic teacher require moral counseling. • True • False

  32. Question 8-32 (p. 892) • If clients generally shared the view of Ben W. Heineman, Jr., former Senior Vice-President for Law and Public Affairs for • General Electric, they would: • object to the lawyer as civics teacher • welcome the lawyer as civics teacher • be indifferent to the lawyer as civics teacher

  33. Question 8-33 (p. 909) • If I had to choose one perspective for my role as lawyer, I would choose: • hired gun • moral advocate • feminist lawyer • racial justice lawyer • religious lawyer • civics teacher

More Related