Cargando…

Lawyer and client : who's in charge? /

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Rosenthal, Douglas E. (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: New York : Russell Sage Foundation, [1974]
Colección:Publications of Russell Sage Foundation.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Chapter 1. Traditional and Participatory Models of the Professional-Client Relationship ; How Active Should Clients Be in Trying To Understand Their Problem and in Trying to Influence Its Solution? ; Do Professionals Usually Give Effective Service? ; Do Client Problems Have a Single Best Routine and Technical Accessible to Lay Understanding? ; Do Professionals Give Disinterested Service? ; Are High Professional Standards Set and Maintained by Professional Associations and the Courts?
  • How Accessible Is Effective Professional Service to Paying Clients? Conclusion ; Chapter 2. The Relationship between Client Participation and Case Result in Personal Injury Claims ; The Aggregate Measure of Client Participation and Case Outcome ; The Impact of Individual Types of Participation ; The Limits of Client Participation in Explaining Case Outcome ; Evaluating Attorney Performance ; Conclusion ; Chapter 3. The Nature of Personal Injury Problems ; The Claim as Presented to the Attorney ; The Injury as Experienced by the Client ; The Uncertain Impact of the Claims Process Institutions ; Conclusion
  • Chapter 4. Conflicts of Interest between Lawyer and Client in Personal Injury Problem Solving ; The Lawyer's Conflict with His Client ; The Lawyer's Options for Reducing Conflict with His Client ; How Lawyers Resolve Conflicting Interests with Clients ; Conclusion ; Chapter 5. Client Acccess to Effective Legal Service in Personal Injury Problem Solving ; High Standards of Professional Performance Have Neither Been Set Nor Maintained by the Legal Profession and the Courts ; Laymen Tend Not To ""Choose"" Lawyers ; Relevant Indicia of Professional Competence
  • The "Organized Bar" Has Restricted Client Information Relevant To Obtaining Effective Legal Service ; Chapter 6. Principles and Policies Governing Professional-Client Relationships ; The Reality of the Traditional Model ; In Generalizability of Lessons Drawn from New York City Personal Injury Law Practice ; The Traditional Model as Norm ; The Participatory Model as Norm ; Sources of Additional Information ; The Purposes of the Participatory Model ; The Reality of the Participatory Model ; Appendix A. The Research Method ; Defining the Research ; The Client Sample ; The Client Questionnaire ; The Expert Panel Evaluation ; The Lawyer Questionnaire ; Appendix B. Rules Regarding Personal Injury Claims of Supreme Court Appellate Division First Department.