Law in Contemporary Society

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The Jekyll and Hyde Components of the Legal Profession

Our justice system depends on the functional training of future lawyers in law schools across the country. This legal training is a flawed one filled with many countervailing forces. The most significant of these contrasting forces are the desire to educate legal and social leaders who, with the proper legal morals and sense of justice, can best serve their clients and the general population, and the economic drain this form of education imposes on future lawyers causing them to seek mainly capitalistic endeavors upon graduation. We will refer to the former force as the Jekyll component and the latter as the Hyde component.


Revision 6r6 - 14 Jan 2015 - 22:15:33 - IanSullivan
Revision 5r5 - 20 Jul 2013 - 15:26:45 - BiyeremOkengwu
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