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LDR04012cmm u2200493 i 4500
001000000327170
003OCoLC
00520240307135125
006m d
007cr cnu---unuuu
008220311s2023 cau ob 001 0 eng
010 ▼a 2022011082
020 ▼a 9781503633698 ▼q electronic book
020 ▼a 1503633691 ▼q electronic book
020 ▼z 9781503613560 ▼q hardcover
035 ▼a 3395054 ▼b (N$T)
035 ▼a (OCoLC)1343160843
040 ▼a DLC ▼b eng ▼e rda ▼c DLC ▼d YDX ▼d N$T ▼d YDX ▼d 248032
042 ▼a pcc
043 ▼a n-us---
049 ▼a MAIN
05004 ▼a KF302 ▼b .H69 2023
08200 ▼a 344.7301/76134 ▼2 23/eng/20220831
1001 ▼a Howarth, Joan W., ▼e author.
24510 ▼a Shaping the bar : ▼b the future of attorney licensing / ▼c Joan W. Howarth.
264 1 ▼a Stanford, California : ▼b Stanford University Press, ▼c [2023]
300 ▼a 1 online resource (xii, 226 pages)
336 ▼a text ▼b txt ▼2 rdacontent
337 ▼a computer ▼b c ▼2 rdamedia
338 ▼a online resource ▼b cr ▼2 rdacarrier
504 ▼a Includes bibliographical references and index.
5050 ▼a The crisis in attorney licensing -- Becoming a lawyer in the young nation -- Shaping the bar in the twentieth century -- The 1970s legacy of activism, psychometrics, and good faith -- Pressure points in contemporary licensing -- Decades lost without research -- Doubling down on the errors of legal education -- Finally, research on minimum competence -- Who fits? -- Fixing character & fitness -- Twelve guiding principles -- Clinical residencies -- Educational requirements -- Escaping the conceptual traps of today's bar exams -- Bar exams : better, best, and other fixes.
520 ▼a "In Shaping the Bar, Joan Howarth describes how the twin gatekeepers of the legal profession -- law schools and licensers -- are failing the public with devastating consequences. Attorney licensing should be laser-focused on readiness to practice law with the minimum competence of a new attorney. According to Howarth, requirements today are both too difficult and too easy. Amid the crisis in unmet legal services, record numbers of law school graduates, disproportionately people of color, are failing bar exams that are not meaningful tests of competence to practice. At the same time, after seven years of higher education, hundreds of thousands of dollars of law school debt, two months of cramming legal rules, and success on a bar exam, a candidate can be licensed to practice law without having been in a law office or even seen a lawyer with a client. Howarth makes the case that the licensing rituals familiar to generations of lawyers -- unfocused law degrees and obsolete bar exams -- are protecting members of the profession more than the public. Beyond explaining the failures of the current system, this book presents the latest research on competent lawyering and examples of better approaches. This book presents the path forward by means of licensing changes to protect the public while building an inclusive, diverse, competent, ethical profession. Thoughtful and engaging, Shaping the Bar is both an authoritative account of attorney licensing and a pragmatic handbook for overdue equitable reform of a powerful profession"-- ▼c Provided by publisher.
588 ▼a Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on October 19, 2022).
590 ▼a WorldCat record variable field(s) change: 050
650 0 ▼a Admission to the bar ▼z United States.
650 0 ▼a Lawyers ▼x Licenses ▼z United States.
650 0 ▼a Law ▼x Study and teaching ▼z United States.
650 0 ▼a Bar examinations ▼z United States.
655 4 ▼a Electronic books.
77608 ▼i Print version: ▼a Howarth, Joan W. ▼t Shaping the bar ▼d Stanford, California : Stanford University Press, 2022 ▼z 9781503613560 ▼w (DLC) 2022011081
85640 ▼3 EBSCOhost ▼u https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=3395054
938 ▼a EBSCOhost ▼b EBSC ▼n 3395054
990 ▼a 관리자
994 ▼a 92 ▼b N$T