Lawyering skills and the legal process:
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge [u.a.]
Cambridge Univ. Press
2006
|
Ausgabe: | 2. ed., repr. |
Schriftenreihe: | The law in context series
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Publisher description Contributor biographical information Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | XXII, 443 S. Ill., graph. Darst. 24 cm |
ISBN: | 0521619505 9780521619509 |
Internformat
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020 | |a 0521619505 |c pbk. |9 0-521-61950-5 | ||
020 | |a 9780521619509 |9 978-0-521-61950-9 | ||
035 | |a (OCoLC)494571779 | ||
035 | |a (DE-599)BVBBV036067218 | ||
040 | |a DE-604 |b ger |e aacr | ||
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049 | |a DE-703 |a DE-2070s | ||
050 | 0 | |a KD474 | |
082 | 0 | |a 347.41/0504 | |
084 | |a PU 4378 |0 (DE-625)140577: |2 rvk | ||
100 | 1 | |a Maughan, Caroline |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Lawyering skills and the legal process |c Caroline Maughan and Julian Webb |
250 | |a 2. ed., repr. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Cambridge [u.a.] |b Cambridge Univ. Press |c 2006 | |
300 | |a XXII, 443 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst. |c 24 cm | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
490 | 0 | |a The law in context series | |
500 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index | ||
650 | 7 | |a Procès |2 ram | |
650 | 7 | |a Procédure (droit) |2 ram | |
650 | 4 | |a Practice of law |z Great Britain | |
650 | 4 | |a Practice of law | |
651 | 4 | |a Großbritannien | |
700 | 1 | |a Webb, Julian S. |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)12875530X |4 aut | |
856 | 4 | |u http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0632/2006272560-d.html |3 Publisher description | |
856 | 4 | |u http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0732/2006272560-b.html |3 Contributor biographical information | |
856 | 4 | 2 | |m Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth |q application/pdf |u http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018958568&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |3 Inhaltsverzeichnis |
999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-018958568 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804141115570388992 |
---|---|
adam_text | Contents
Preface
to the second edition page
xvii
Table of Statutes
xix
Table of Cases
xxi
Introduction
1
1
Descent into the swamp
Π
Objectives
11
Supports benchmark statements
11
A dinosaur snack?
12
Exercise
1.1
Is legal professionalism in crisis?
13
Exercise
1.2
Redefining knowledge
19
Where the action isn t
20
Exercise
1.3
What s the problem?
20
Where the action is
21
The skills of lawyering
24
Knowing in action
25
Exercise
1.4
When you were a child
... 25
The art of lawyering
26
The values of lawyering
27
Exercise
1.5
High ideals
27
Exercise
1.6
Swampy situations?
28
Learning the art of lawyering
29
Exercise
1.7
Crisis? What crisis?
29
Exercise
1.8
Concepts
32
Exercise
1.9
Review questions
33
Exercise
1.10
Learning points
33
Further reading
33
2
Learning to live in the swamp
34
Objectives
34
Supports benchmark statements
34
What is reflection?
35
Exercise
2.1
To smoke or not to smoke?
36
VII
viii Contents
Exercise
2.2
An
unexpected visit
36
Experiential learning and the learning cycle
37
Discrepant reasoning
40
Exercise
2.3
The discrepant solicitor?
40
Exercise
2.4
Write all I know about
... 42
Distancing and disconnectedness
43
Summary
44
The learning diary
44
Exercise
2.5
Re-cycling
44
Exercise
2.6
More re-cycling
47
Student/teacher roles and relationships
48
Exercise
2.7
Re-learning
49
What kind of learner am I?
50
Exercise
2.8
The learning styles questionnaire
50
Exercise
2.9
Concepts
52
Exercise
2.10
Review questions
52
Further reading
53
Law talk and lay talk: lawyers as communicators
54
Objectives
54
Supports benchmark statements
54
Lawyers need to talk!
55
Why communication skills matter
56
Exercise
3.1
What makes a good teacher?
56
Exercise
3.2
The problems with law talk
57
How we communicate
59
Exercise
3.3
Communication models
59
Barriers and bridges to effective communication
60
Exercise
3.4
A Martian description
60
The effect of non-verbal cues
61
Exercise
3.5
The lights are on
... 62
Exercise
3.6
Body talk
62
Environmental factors
65
Personal factors
65
Cultural factors
67
Inter-cultural factors
71
Exercise
3.7
Straight to the point or circumlocution?
76
Exercise
3.8
Concepts
79
Exercise
3.9
Jury instructions: clarity or confusion?
79
Exercise
3.10
Testing the evidence or badgering the witness?
80
Further reading
80
You ll never work alone: group learning and group skills
81
Objectives
81
Contents ix
Supports
benchmark
Statements 81
Stone age instincts
82
Exercise
4.1
Who am I?
84
Learning in groups: what is it good for?
85
Exercise
4.2
Groups I have known, groups I would like to know
85
Group theory and research
87
Higher achievement
88
More positive relationships
89
Psychological health
89
Exercise
4.3
Broken squares
90
Barriers to effective group learning
91
Exercise
4.4
What am I like in a group?
91
Group dynamics
94
Exercise
4.5
Fishbowl
94
Exercise
4.6
What are your preferred team roles?
95
Exercise
4.7
Roles in my group
95
Setting ground rules
95
How groups grow
96
Exercise
4.8
What s going wrong? Tackling problems
98
The dynamics of lawyer teamwork
99
Exercise
4.9
Powerful conspiracies or lost causes?
100
Feedback
103
Exercise
4.10
Concepts
104
Exercise
4.11
Tag wrestling
104
Exercise
4.12
Guilt by association?
105
Reflective exercise: what is your current group skill level?
106
Further reading
106
Interviewing: building the relationship and gaining participation
107
Objectives
107
Supports benchmark statements
107
The functions of the lawyer-client interview
108
Exercise
5.1
The objectives of interviewing
108
Exercise
5.2
The other side
... 109
Assumptions about the relationship
111
Exercise
5.3
Who s in charge here?
111
Setting the scene: preparing for the interview
114
Consider your information needs
114
Exercise
5.4
You get what you ask for
114
Planning the physical environment
116
Welcoming: establishing a relationship in the interview
117
Exercise
5.5
Meet, greet and seat
118
Note-taking
118
χ
Contents
Discussing costs
119
Territory
119
Listening and questioning
121
Listening
121
Exercise
5.6
Is anybody there?
121
Exercise
5.7
Hyperactive?
122
Questioning
123
Exercise
5.8
Me and Mrs Jones
124
Exercise
5.9
Tell me why
127
Pulling it all together
127
Exercise
5.10
The client interview
128
Advising and counselling
128
Lawyers as advisers
128
Exercise
5.11
Toast
128
Lawyers as counsellors
132
Exercise
5.12
Home sweet home
134
Exercise
5.13
Car trouble
135
Exercise
5.14
Handling emotion
137
Exercise
5.15
Pressing problems
138
Parting, and beginning the continuing relationship
139
Ending
139
Beginning
140
Exercise
5.16
Planning your next steps
140
Participating
141
Interviewing and
empathie
lawyering: a (re)vision of practice?
143
Empathy and participation
143
Exercise
5.17
Empathie
interviewing
144
Towards a (re)vision of the relationship
145
Exercise
5.18
Concepts
147
Exercise
5.19
Blowing the whistle?
148
Exercise
5.20
Review questions
150
Learning points
151
Further reading
151
ft Tho
лгулН
1а АЛ/ог ·
othirc
лпгі
w^liioc in
Ιαπ^Ι
л/ог1с
152
Objectives
1
-^
Supports benchmark statements
152
Introduction
1
Exercise
6.1
Tinker, tailor
...
I-
Exercise
6.2
Does it matter? l^8
The regulation of professional conduct and ethics
The nature of professional regulation ^
The codes of conduct
Contents xi
Disciplining lawyers
164
Exploring professional conduct and ethics
166
Using the ethics case study
166
Trouble on the High Street
-
Part
1 167
Exercise
6.3
Jason arrives
167
Exercise
6.4
Bayview Developments
170
Exercise
6.5
The litigant in person
175
Trouble on the High Street
-
Part
2 177
Exercise
6.6
Jason and KB Construction
177
Exercise
6.7
To lie or not to lie
179
Exercise
6.8
In whose best interests?
188
Exercise
6.9
Whose secret is it anyway?
190
Trouble on the High Street
-
Part
3 195
Exercise
6.10
Bayview strikes again
195
Should we rethink legal ethics?
198
Ethics and problem-solving
198
Exercise
6.11
My station and its duties
199
Exercise
6.12
Concepts
203
Exercise
6.13
Review questions
203
Further reading
204
Clarifying language: making sense of writing
205
Objectives
205
Supports benchmark statements
205
Why it is important to write well
206
Exercise
7.1
What, when and why?
206
Exercise
7.2
Which is dense? The reader or the text?
207
Exercise
7.3
Lord Lucid
211
Learning from your writing experience
212
Exercise
7.4
Do you suffer from verbal diarrhoea?
213
Know exactly what you want to say
214
Exercise
7.5
The brick exercise
214
Differences between the spoken and the written language
214
Planning
215
Exercise
7.6
Plain thinking
216
Exercise
7.7
Who is my reader?
216
Exercise
7.8
Golden bull
219
Summary
220
Selecting appropriate language
220
Exercise
7.9
Who speaks good English? It is I!
220
Select an appropriate variety of English
221
Select an appropriate register
223
Exercise
7.10
Le mot
juste
224
xii Contents
Select
an
appropriate level of formality 224
Select gender-neutral language 225
Summary 226
Say exactly what you mean to say 226
Exercise
7.11
Grasping grammar 226
Getting the fundamentals right 227
Exercise
7.12
Bad grammar 227
Exercise
7.13
Some people just don t know when to stop
231
Exercise
7.14
Whose who? 234
Use correct spelling 235
Summary ZJO
Moving towards artistry 23
Vocabulary 236
New use or misuse?
Sentence length and complexity 24
Exercise
7.15
Sense and nonsense 243
Paragraphing 243
Exercise
7.16
Link-hunting 24
Exercise
7.17
Take out the rubbish 246
Self-edit your writing 24
Exercise
7.18
Self-editing 248
Writing letters 248
Writing to clients: client care 2<*°
Writing to other people 249
Exercise
7.19
Joyless in the
Maldini
24
Good writing makes sense
250
Exercise
7.20
Concepts 2^
Exercise
7.21
More rubbish 2·^
Exercise
7.22
Blowing the whistle? Part II 253
Review question 2^3
Learning points 2^4
Further reading 2^4
Self-editing checklist for writing 254
Manipulating language: drafting legal documents 256
Objectives 2^6
Supports benchmark statements 256
Legal documents are precision instruments 257
Exercise
8.1
Runaway trolleys 257
Legal documents and the three Cs 259
Exercise
8.2
Unravelling the regs 264
Legal language is powerful stuff 266
Legal language is not plain language 274
Contents xiii
Exercise
8.3
Plain reflection
274
Exercise
8.4
Clause analysis
279
Legal language is unduly peculiar
280
Lawyers, not the people, decide what words mean
280
Exercise
8.5
Shovelling excrement
282
Put yourself in her position: deriving meaning from context
283
Exercise
8.6
Natural meanings
283
Exercise
8.7
Caution! Unforeseen hazard ahead!
284
Does it matter what it looks like? Layout and punctuation
286
Isolated sentences
287
Coherence and word order
287
Interceding with the Deity: pleadings
289
Exercise
8.8
Major surgery
290
The illiteracy of the well-educated
292
Defining your drafting principles
293
Exercise
8.9
A general checklist for drafting
293
Putting principles into practice
297
Exercise
8.10
Have a go
297
Defining your approach
297
Aim to be a critical composer, not a complacent copier
298
Exercise
8.11
Concepts
299
Exercise
8.12
Analysis
299
Exercise
8.13
Boilerplate redrafting
299
Exercise
8.14
What is reasonable doubt?
300
Review questions
300
Further reading
301
Handling conflict: negotiation
302
Objectives
302
Supports benchmark statements
302
Making decisions and resolving conflict
303
Exercise
9.1
Conflicts of interest
303
How do you deal with conflict?
305
Exercise
9.2
The shark and the turtle
305
The context of legal negotiation
308
Naming, blaming, claiming
...
and negotiating
308
Exercise
9.3
Negotiate? What for?
309
The growth of Alternative Dispute Resolution
311
ADR and negotiation
312
What clients want from negotiation
ЗІЗ
What lawyers want from negotiation
314
Mind the gap
315
Learning the art of lawyer negotiation
317
xiv
Contents
Step
1:
Identify the critical issues
318
Exercise
9.4
What is there to negotiate about?
318
Exercise
9.5
Pam and Wilf
323
Step
2:
Select a negotiating strategy and style
323
Exercise
9.6
Have your cake and eat it
... 327
Exercise
9.7
The Red-Blue exercise
329
Step
3:
Sort out your ethics
331
Exercise
9.8
How low can you go?
333
Exercise
9.9
Hidden messages
334
Step
4:
Work out your tactics
338
Exercise
9.10
Staying cool, calm and collected
340
Step
5:
Keep your act together during the negotiation
341
Step
6:
Keep a negotiation journal
343
Planning the negotiation
343
The critical issues and potential outcomes
343
Our strategy and tactics
344
Their strategy and tactics
344
Are lawyers poor negotiators?
344
Negotiation and mediation advocacy
346
Exercise
9.11
Concepts
348
Exercise
9.12
Yet another negotiation
348
Review questions
348
Further reading
349
10
Advocacy: case management and preparation
350
Objectives
350
Supports benchmark statements
350
Advocacy in context
351
The adversarial nature of advocacy
351
Recreating facts in the courtroom
352
Exercise
10.1
Evidential quiz
353
Exercise
10.2
The surgeon s story
355
A case study: the case of William Gardiner
357
Preparation
361
Developing a working hypothesis
361
Exercise
10.3
Malice aforethought?
362
Exercise
10.4
The money-lender and the merchant s daughter
366
Exercise
10.5
Gardiner: chronology and issues
367
Exercise
10.6
Elementary, my dear Watson
... 368
Constructing your theory of the case
368
Exercise
10.7
Making inferences
372
Exercise
10.8
Moriarty s a murderer
373
Exercise
10.9
Moriarty rides again?
374
Contents
xv
Organising your material
376
Exercise
10.10
Maughan
v
Webb
378
Preparing your client and witnesses
381
Exercise
10.11
A crusty in court
382
Exercise
10.12
Jane s dilemma
(1)
385
Exercise
10.13
Jane s dilemma
(2)
386
Exercise
10.14
Superwitness
390
On the day
—
a final checklist
394
Exercise
10.15
Concepts
395
Exercise
10.16
Review question
396
Further reading
396
11
Into court: the deepest swamp?
397
Objectives
397
Supports benchmark statements
397
The art of advocacy
398
Exercise
11.1
Advocacy as communication
398
Theme and method: advocacy as storytelling
399
The story model
399
Exercise
11.2
Let me tell you a story
402
Exercise
11.3
Making a case into a story
402
Speeches
403
Opening and closing speeches
403
Exercise
11.4
Gardiner: opening for the prosecution
403
Exercise
11.5
The road map
404
Exercise
11.6
Done to death?
409
Summary
411
Other narrative contexts
412
Exercise
11.7:
Bailing out?
413
Examining witnesses
413
Examination in chief
413
Exercise
11.8
Twenty questions?
414
Exercise
11.9
Λ ν
Wainwright
415
Exercise
11.10
You, the jury
416
Exercise
11.11
The gestatory period of the African elephant
418
Exercise
11.12
You lead and I ll follow
418
Exercise
11.13
There are more questions than answers
...
420
Summary
421
Cross-examination
421
Exercise
11.14
The worm turns?
422
Exercise
11.15
Anger
428
Summary
429
Exercise
11.16
Driven to distraction?
429
xvi Contents
Re-examination
429
Conclusion: advocacy, ethics and adversarialism
430
Exercise
11.17
Concepts
431
Exercise
11.18
Review questions
432
Further reading
432
Index
433
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Maughan, Caroline Webb, Julian S. |
author_GND | (DE-588)12875530X |
author_facet | Maughan, Caroline Webb, Julian S. |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Maughan, Caroline |
author_variant | c m cm j s w js jsw |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV036067218 |
callnumber-first | K - Law |
callnumber-label | KD474 |
callnumber-raw | KD474 |
callnumber-search | KD474 |
callnumber-sort | KD 3474 |
callnumber-subject | KD - United Kingdom and Ireland |
classification_rvk | PU 4378 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)494571779 (DE-599)BVBBV036067218 |
dewey-full | 347.41/0504 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 347 - Procedure and courts |
dewey-raw | 347.41/0504 |
dewey-search | 347.41/0504 |
dewey-sort | 3347.41 3504 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
edition | 2. ed., repr. |
format | Book |
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geographic | Großbritannien |
geographic_facet | Großbritannien |
id | DE-604.BV036067218 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T22:10:45Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0521619505 9780521619509 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-018958568 |
oclc_num | 494571779 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-703 DE-2070s |
owner_facet | DE-703 DE-2070s |
physical | XXII, 443 S. Ill., graph. Darst. 24 cm |
publishDate | 2006 |
publishDateSearch | 2006 |
publishDateSort | 2006 |
publisher | Cambridge Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
series2 | The law in context series |
spelling | Maughan, Caroline Verfasser aut Lawyering skills and the legal process Caroline Maughan and Julian Webb 2. ed., repr. Cambridge [u.a.] Cambridge Univ. Press 2006 XXII, 443 S. Ill., graph. Darst. 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier The law in context series Includes bibliographical references and index Procès ram Procédure (droit) ram Practice of law Great Britain Practice of law Großbritannien Webb, Julian S. Verfasser (DE-588)12875530X aut http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0632/2006272560-d.html Publisher description http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0732/2006272560-b.html Contributor biographical information Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018958568&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Maughan, Caroline Webb, Julian S. Lawyering skills and the legal process Procès ram Procédure (droit) ram Practice of law Great Britain Practice of law |
title | Lawyering skills and the legal process |
title_auth | Lawyering skills and the legal process |
title_exact_search | Lawyering skills and the legal process |
title_full | Lawyering skills and the legal process Caroline Maughan and Julian Webb |
title_fullStr | Lawyering skills and the legal process Caroline Maughan and Julian Webb |
title_full_unstemmed | Lawyering skills and the legal process Caroline Maughan and Julian Webb |
title_short | Lawyering skills and the legal process |
title_sort | lawyering skills and the legal process |
topic | Procès ram Procédure (droit) ram Practice of law Great Britain Practice of law |
topic_facet | Procès Procédure (droit) Practice of law Great Britain Practice of law Großbritannien |
url | http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0632/2006272560-d.html http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0732/2006272560-b.html http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018958568&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT maughancaroline lawyeringskillsandthelegalprocess AT webbjulians lawyeringskillsandthelegalprocess |