Who Uses the U.S.? Law Firms, Globalization, and Approaches to Presence in the U.S
In: 28 Sw. J. Int'l L. 276 (2023)
18 results
Sort by:
In: 28 Sw. J. Int'l L. 276 (2023)
SSRN
In: Asian journal of law and society, Volume 3, Issue 2, p. 261-271
ISSN: 2052-9023
AbstractLaw schools in East Asia and the US share at least two central challenges. The first relates to globalization and the responsibility of law schools to prepare students to practise in a global environment. The second relates to the contest for control over lawyer licensing that law schools engage in with bar authorities, among others. Is either challenge appropriate for solution through a collaborative approach among law schools from different countries and regions? Research on collaboration identifies the need for a common, shared purpose among collaborators. Local differences make collaboration unlikely with regard to the contest for control, but the goal of developing an approach to prepare students for work in a global environment rises above national differences and is ripe for collaboration.
In: Stanford Law & Policy Review, Volume 24, Issue 2
SSRN
In: 61 Journal of Legal Education 691 (2012)
SSRN
In: Fordham Law Review, Volume 80, Issue 6
SSRN
In: 14 Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies (2007)
SSRN
The increasingly international reach of law owes part of its momentum to individual lawyers and law firms that function as carriers of ideas, processes and policies. U.S. lawyers are important participants in this expanding influence of law, both in the public sphere in areas such as human rights and in private areas, such as regulation of business. They work as representatives of both U.S. clients and foreign organizations and governments, bringing their basic mindset, shaped by education and practice experiences, into their dealings with foreign lawyers as they connect in a variety of roles, from co- and opposing counsel, to employees and partners. By working alongside and across the table from each other, U.S. and foreign lawyers have opportunities to influence one another and extend the reach of their conceptions about the way law and legal practice should work. Through these interactions, they define the terms of internationalization and thereby establish the agenda for the role of law at the international level. This article examines the regulatory environment in which that interaction occurs. It considers the obstacles faced by law firms intent upon combining foreign and U.S. lawyers and builds on prior work that investigated the impact on U.S. law firms of the development of an international market for legal services and the roles of foreign lawyers in the U.S. Regulation within the United States concerning the interaction between foreign and U.S. lawyers shapes the ways in which U.S. firms participate in the developing international market for legal services; it may well determine the placement and extent of that participation through U.S.-based activities. Further, restrictions on the interaction of foreign and U.S. lawyers limit the influence of U.S. practice and procedures on foreign lawyers, because such restrictions limit the opportunities for foreign lawyers to learn the ways and thinking of U.S. lawyers.
BASE
In: Georgetown Law and Economics Research Paper No. 1406131
SSRN
Working paper
In: 8 CJCCL 313 (2022)
SSRN
In: Chapter IN: Power, Legal Education, and Law School Cultures Meera E. Deo, Mindie Lazarus-Black, Elizabeth Mertz, editors, New York, NY : Routledge, 2020
SSRN
In: Law and Social Inquiry, 2019, Forthcoming
SSRN
In: Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies No. 237
SSRN
In: The women's review of books, Volume 3, Issue 8, p. 15
In: Columbia Journal of Asian Law, Volume 27
SSRN
Working paper