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E-raamat: Importance of Being Honest: How Lying, Secrecy, and Hypocrisy Collide with Truth in Law

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-May-2008
  • Kirjastus: New York University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780814752364
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
  • Hind: 43,29 €*
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-May-2008
  • Kirjastus: New York University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780814752364

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Examines the complex roles of honesty and law in current affairs and historical events.

Popular author Steven Lubet brings his signature blend of humor, advocacy, and legal ethics to The Importance of Being Honest, an incisive analysis of how honesty and law play out in current affairs and historical events. Drawing on original work as well as op-ed pieces and articles that have appeared in the American Lawyer, the Chicago Tribune, and many other national publications, Lubet explores the complex aspects of honesty in the legal world.
The Importance of Being Honest is full of tales of questionable practices and poor behavior, chosen because negative examples are much richer, and often more remarkable, in their ultimate lessons. Wyatt Earp&;s shootout with Billy Clanton, Bill Clinton&;s disastrous decision to lie under oath, Oscar Wilde&;s self-destructive perjury in a 1896 libel trial, and the dubious resolution of Justice Scalia&;s duck hunting trip with Dick Cheney are only a few of the cases Lubet use to illustrate that law is a vague and boggy realm where truth, and falsehood, is seldom absolute. With his lively, insightful, and sometimes hilarious prose, Lubet takes readers on a tour of the law in our everyday lives, and forces us to rethink how we really feel about honesty and truth.



Popular author Steven Lubet brings his signature blend of humor, advocacy, and legal ethics to The Importance of Being Honest, an incisive analysis of how honesty and law play out in current affairs and historical events. Drawing on original work as well as op-ed pieces and articles that have appeared in the American Lawyer, the Chicago Tribune, and many other national publications, Lubet explores the complex aspects of honesty in the legal world.
The Importance of Being Honest is full of tales of questionable practices and poor behavior, chosen because negative examples are much richer, and often more remarkable, in their ultimate lessons. Wyatt Earp’s shootout with Billy Clanton, Bill Clinton’s disastrous decision to lie under oath, Oscar Wilde’s self-destructive perjury in a 1896 libel trial, and the dubious resolution of Justice Scalia’s duck hunting trip with Dick Cheney are only a few of the cases Lubet use to illustrate that law is a vague and boggy realm where truth, and falsehood, is seldom absolute. With his lively, insightful, and sometimes hilarious prose, Lubet takes readers on a tour of the law in our everyday lives, and forces us to rethink how we really feel about honesty and truth.

Arvustused

"Lubet tackles a series of subtle and thorny ethical questions that lawyers and judges face each day. These questions can challenge their integrity, determine their effectiveness and affect how the public views the legal profession. Lubets central concern, which he mines adeptly, is with actions that are arguably legal but may also be strategically or morally wrong. Lubets writing is a great strength: straightforward, funny, intelligent and devoid of legalese. Like a good color analyst, he conveys an insiders knowledge in an entertaining and informative way" (Publishers Weekly) "Chock full of information and insight." (St. Croix Review) "Collects controversial cases, raises intriguing questions, and describes them in accessible prose and wry wit." (The Washington Lawyer) "The Importance of Being Honest is both funny and dangerous. In pulling the lid off the hypocrisy and delusions at virtually every level of the legal profession, he is in danger of touching off a chain reaction that could result in the average Americans understanding and thus his and her ability to reform the legal system." - Allen Barra (Wall Street Journal) "Lubet is so witty and entertaining that you may not even notice how much youre learning about the dangers of honesty-deficient lawyers and judges. A real eye-opener!" - Rachel Maines,author of The Technology of Orgasm: Hysteria, the Vibrator, and Womens Sexual Satisfaction "Lubet probes some of the thorniest ethical and legal questions facing us, and respects both his reader and the law enough to avoid simplistic answers. Whether hes scrutinizing Bill Clintons relationship to his lawyer, reassessing what we know about the Scopes Monkey trial, or evaluating the demotion of Pluto, Lubets book offers a fresh lens through which to view legal questions." - Dahlia Lithwick (Slate.com) "Explores the interplay between honesty and candor, or its absence, in the legal profession for a number of years in essays and editorials." (New York Law Journal) "Provides an interesting look at various questions of ethics and the law." (Law and Politics Book Review)

Muu info

An exploration of the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction 1
I Clients
Introduction
13
1 Sex, Lies, and Depositions
14
2 My Lawyer Made Me Do It
19
3 Morally Gray
23
4 McKinney's Bluff
26
5 The Truth about Torts
29
6 A Missing Witness
36
7 Freedom Stories
40
8 The Importance of Being Honest
44
II Lawyers
Introduction
57
9 False Flats
59
10 Who Deserves the Truth?
65
11 When Honesty Isn't Enough
68
12 Hypocrisy on the Left
72
13 Requiem for a Faithful Lawyer
77
14 Evolution of Myth
80
15 Hidden Interests
84
16 When Conventional Wisdom Goes Wrong
87
17 Sensory Deception
91
18 How Lawyers (Ought to) Think
95
19 Truth in Humor
102
20 Confronting Cougars
111
III Judges
Introduction
117
21 Life Imitates Baseball
118
22 The Elusive Transparency of Ethics
123
23 Ducks in a Row
127
24 An Honest Day's Pay
134
25 Confirmation Mud
139
26 A Spouse Speaks
145
27 Veiled Justice
150
28 Bullying from the Bench
155
29 Thought Control
162
30 Platonic Censures
167
31 Stupid Judge Tricks
172
IV Academics
Introduction
179
32 Baring It All
180
33 False Positive
184
34 Truth in Citizenship
188
35 The Best Policy
194
36 Clinical Commandments
198
37 Pluto's Plight, and Ours
203
38 The Bedouin Horse Trade
207
39 There Are No Scriveners Here
215
V Medical Practice
Introduction
223
40 Ethics Business
224
41 Mistakes and Cover-Ups
229
42 The Benevolent Otolaryngologist
235
43 Desperate Doctors, Desperate Measures
242
Afterword 247
Notes and Sources 251
Index 261
About the Author 269
Steven Lubet is the Williams Memorial Professor of Law at Northwestern University in Chicago, Illinois. He is the author of a dozen books, including Nothing but the Truth: Why Lawyers Don't, Can't, and Shouldn't Have to Tell the Whole Truth (NYU Press) and over 100 articles. He also writes an award-winning column for the American Lawyer magazine. His commentaries have been head on National Public Radios Morning Edition, and his op-ed columns have appeared in the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune, and other major national newspapers.