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  2. American Bar Association Model Rules of Professional Conduct

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

    6.1: Pro Bono Service: Lawyers should endeavor to provide a certain amount of legal services free of charge to persons, organizations, or causes in need of representation. [21] 7 Information About Legal Services 7.3: Limitations on methods of soliciting clients and business. [22] 8 Maintaining the Integrity of the Profession

  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. Legal ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_ethics

    The Model Rules address many topics which are found in state ethics rules, including the client-lawyer relationship, duties of a lawyer as advocate in adversary proceedings, dealings with persons other than clients, law firms and associations, public service, advertising, and maintaining the integrity of the profession. Respect of client ...

  5. Ethical code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethical_code

    A code of practice is adopted by a profession (or by a governmental or non-governmental organization) to regulate that profession. A code of practice may be styled as a code of professional responsibility, which will discuss difficult issues and difficult decisions that will often need to be made, and then provide a clear account of what behavior is considered "ethical" or "correct" or "right ...

  6. Monroe H. Freedman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monroe_H._Freedman

    Freedman's first ethics book, Lawyers' Ethics in an Adversary System, was published in 1975 and received the ABA's Gavel Award Certificate of Merit.It received a number of favorable reviews; in the Harvard Civil Rights/Civil Liberties Law Review, NYU professor Norman Dorsen called the book one of the few "monumental contributions to legal education in the past generation."

  7. Professional ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Professional_ethics

    Professional ethics encompass the personal and corporate standards of behavior expected of professionals. [1] The word professionalism originally applied to vows of a religious order. By no later than the year 1675, the term had seen secular application and was applied to the three learned professions: divinity, law, and medicine. [2]

  8. Category:Professional ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Professional_ethics

    Professional ethics concerns the moral issues that arise because of the concerns of specialist knowledge that professionals attain, and how the use of this knowledge should be governed when providing a service to the public. (Ruth Chadwick (1998). Professional Ethics. In E. Craig (Ed.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. London: Routledge.

  9. Professional conduct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Professional_conduct

    Professional conduct is the field of regulation of members of professional bodies, either acting under statutory or contractual powers. [ 1 ] Historically, professional conduct was wholly undertaken by the private professional bodies, the sole legal authority for which was of a contractual nature.