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  2. American Bar Association Model Rules of Professional Conduct

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

    Noting that the last overhaul of the California ethics rules was in 1992, in the early 2000s the State Bar of California formed a Commission for the Revision of the Rules of Professional Conduct tasked with considering intervening changes in the law and the findings of the ABA's Ethics 2000 Commission. [46]

  3. Legal outsourcing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_outsourcing

    The process of Legal Outsourcing has come in conflict with the Model Code of Conduct issued by the American Bar Association. [28] However, there have been ethics opinions from various local bar associations (New York, [29] San Diego [30]) and recently the American Bar Association [31] that discuss ethical legal outsourcing and how to achieve it ...

  4. Attribute-based access control - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attribute-based_access_control

    ABAC policy rules are generated as Boolean functions of the subject's attributes, the object's attributes, and the environment attributes. [ 3 ] Unlike role-based access control (RBAC), which defines roles that carry a specific set of privileges associated with them and to which subjects are assigned, ABAC can express complex rule sets that can ...

  5. Administrative law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Administrative_law

    Administrative law is a division of law governing the activities of executive branch agencies of government. Administrative law includes executive branch rulemaking (executive branch rules are generally referred to as "regulations"), adjudication, and the enforcement of laws.

  6. Jurisprudence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jurisprudence

    Jurisprudence, also known as theory of law or philosophy of law, is the examination in a general perspective of what law is and what it ought to be.It investigates issues such as the definition of law; legal validity; legal norms and values; as well as the relationship between law and other fields of study, including economics, ethics, history, sociology, and political philosophy.

  7. Insurance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insurance

    A person or entity who buys insurance is known as a policyholder, while a person or entity covered under the policy is called an insured. The insurance transaction involves the policyholder assuming a guaranteed, known, and relatively small loss in the form of a payment to the insurer (a premium) in exchange for the insurer's promise to ...

  8. History of the American legal profession - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_American...

    The Yale Biographical Dictionary of American Law (2009) Oldman, Mark, ed. The Vault.com Guide to America's Top 50 Law Firms (1998) Oller, John. White Shoe: How a New Breed of Wall Street Lawyers Changed Big Business and the American Century (2019), excerpt; Power, Roscoe. "Legal Profession in America," 19 Notre Dame Law Review (1944) pp 334+ online

  9. Lawyer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawyer

    [90] [91] Law schools in developing countries share several common problems, such as an over reliance on practicing judges and lawyers who treat teaching as a part-time commitment, a concomitant scarcity of full-time law professors), [92] [93] incompetent faculty with underqualified credentials, [94] and textbooks that lag behind the current ...