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  2. American Bar Association Model Rules of Professional Conduct

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Bar_Association...

    1.7-1.11: Conflicts of Interest, including restrictions on attorneys arising from current clients, [9] [10] former clients, [11] prior work as a government employee or judge, [12] [13] and association with law firms.

  3. American Bar Association Model Code of Professional ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Bar_Association...

    The American Bar Association Model Code of Professional Responsibility, created by the American Bar Association (ABA) in 1969, was a set of professional standards designed to establish the minimum baseline of legal ethics and professional responsibility generally required of lawyers in the United States.

  4. American Bar Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Bar_Association

    The American Bar Association (ABA) is a voluntary bar association of lawyers and law students; it is not specific to any jurisdiction in the United States. Founded in 1878, [2] the ABA's stated activities are the setting of academic standards for law schools, and the formulation of model ethical codes related to the legal profession.

  5. Ethics Rules Do Not Bar Judges from Membership in the ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/ethics-rules-not-bar-judges...

    An ethics committee, composed of federal judges, recently circulated a draft opinion concluding that it would be unethical for a federal judge to be a member of the Federalist Society for Law and ...

  6. Bar association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_association

    A bar association is a professional association of lawyers as generally organized in countries following the Anglo-American types of jurisprudence. [1] The word bar is derived from the old English/European custom of using a physical railing to separate the area in which court business is done from the viewing area for the general public.

  7. National Judicial College - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Judicial_College

    The National Judicial College (NJC) was established in 1963 [1] as an entity within the American Bar Association. The NJC moved to the campus of the University of Nevada, Reno in 1964 [2] and became a Nevada not-for-profit (501)(c)(3) educational corporation in 1977. [3] The NJC provides judicial training to judges from across the United States.

  8. Oregon State Bar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oregon_State_Bar

    The Oregon State Bar (OSB) is a public corporation and instrumentality of the Oregon Judicial Department in the U.S. state of Oregon.Founded in 1890 as the private Oregon Bar Association, it became a public entity in 1935 that regulates the legal profession.

  9. American Law Institute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Law_Institute

    The American Law Institute's headquarters in Philadelphia. The movement that led to ALI's founding began in 1888. Law professor Henry Taylor Terry, then teaching in Japan, wrote that year to the American Bar Association (ABA) to recommend that it should solicit proposals for a "complete scientific arrangement of the whole body” of the law, and in response, the ABA set up a special committee ...