Overview
On August 27, 1908, at a meeting in Seattle, Washington, the American Bar Association adopted the Canons of Professional Ethics, the first set of model standards of ethical conduct for lawyers nationwide. The development of rules for the self-regulation of the legal profession has been a critically important aspect of the ABA’s work since then, progressing through the Model Code of Professional Responsibility in 1969 to the current Model Rules of Professional Conduct, initially promulgated in 1983. Nearly every state in the country has substantially embraced the Model Rules in form and substance, and other nations regularly look to the ABA framework as they develop ethical standards for their own lawyers. In August 2008 the ABA marks a century of worldwide leadership in developing standards of professional conduct for the legal profession.
Commissioned Papers
The following papers were commissioned by the ABA Center for Professional Responsibility to celebrate the Centennial of the Canons of Professional Ethics. A call for papers was issued requesting scholars and practitioners from around the world to submit their reflections on how the regulation of the practice of law has changed over the past 100 years. These papers will be published in a special edition of The Professional Lawyer.
Simply click on the title to view the commissioned papers.
Repudiating the Holmesian "Bad Man" Through Contextual Ethical Reasoning: The Lawyer as Steward
Author/Bio: Keith R. Fisher
The Fallacy of the Monolithic Client-Lawyer Relationship: Leaving 1908 and Procrustean Regulation Behind
Author/Bio: Steven C. Krane
Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The Future of Self-Regulation-Canada between the United States and the English/Australian Experience
Author/Bio: Paul D. Paton
The Model Rules of Professional Conduct and Serving the Non-Legal Needs of Clients: Professional Regulation in a Time of Change
Author/Bio: Robert Rubinson
The Evolving Regulation of the Legal Profession: The Costs of Indeterminacy and Certainty
Author/Bio: Irma S. Russell
How Things Have Changed: Contrasting the Regulatory Environments of the Canons and the Model Rules
Author/Bio: Ted Schneyer
The Future Regulation of the Legal Profession: The Impact of Treating the Legal Profession as "Service Providers"
Author/Bio: Laurel S. Terry
Moral Engagement Without the "Moral Law" A Post-Canons View of Attorneys' Moral Accountability
Author/Bio: Robert K. Vischer
Sponsorship Opportunities
Sponsorship opportunities are available to support the Centennial celebration of the ABA Canons of Professional Ethics. If you or your organization are interested in
learning more about sponsorship, please contact us.
Panel Program and Reception
FROM CANONS TO CODES TO RULES:
1908-2008 AND BEYOND
A Centennial Celebration of the
ABA Legacy of Lawyer Ethics
Friday, August 8, 2008
2:00pm — 5:00pm
Hilton New York
East Ballroom, Third Floor
New York City
Reception for attendees immediately following in the
East Ballroom, Foyer
5:00pm — 6:30pm
Marking the centennial celebration of the adoption of the ABA Canons of Professional Ethics, forerunner to the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, this program will draw upon issues raised in scholarly papers that have been commissioned for the event that reflect on how the regulation of the practice of law has changed over the past 100 years and how the regulation of lawyers in the United States, and in the international arena, will continue to evolve over the next 100 years.
Moderator
Professor Charles J. Ogletree
Professor of Law and Director of Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice at Harvard Law School
Panelists
- Susan Hackett - Senior Vice President & General Counsel of the Association of Corporate Counsel
- Steven C. Krane – Chair of the ABA Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility
- Carolyn B. Lamm – ABA President-Elect Nominee
- Osama Rahman - Chief Economist, United Kingdom Ministry of Justice
- Ross Ray - President, Law Council of Australia
- Deborah L. Rhode - Professor of Law and Director of the Stanford Center on Ethics at Stanford Law School
- William P. Smith III – General Counsel of the State Bar of Georgia
- Laurel S. Terry -Professor of Law, Penn State Dickinson School of Law
OUR APPRECIATION GOES TO FOLLOWING SPONSORS OF THE ABA CANONS OF PROFESSIONAL ETHICS CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION
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