« Schauer on the Supreme Court's Case Selection Process | Main | Tarkington on Impugning Judicial Integrity in Court Proceedings »
November 4, 2009
Lahav on lawyering in unjust circumstances
Alexandra Lahav (University of Connecticut) has posted Portraits of Resistance: Lawyer Responses to Unjust Proceedings on SSRN.
Abstract:
This Article considers a question rarely addressed: what is the role of
the lawyer in a manifestly unjust procedural regime? Many excellent
studies have considered the role of the judge in unjust regimes, but
the lawyer’s role has been largely ignored. This Article draws on two
case studies: that of lawyers representing civil rights leaders during
protests in Birmingham, Alabama in 1963 and that of lawyers
representing detainees facing military commission proceedings in
Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. These portraits
illuminate the role of the lawyer in a procedurally unjust tribunal
operating within a larger liberal legal regime such as our own.
The
purpose of the Article is to paint a landscape of lawyer resistance to
procedural injustice that can be used as a basis for further inquiry.
The Article considers hard questions about lawyer participation in
unjust tribunals such as whether lawyers who participate in unjust
tribunals are complicit in injustice and what lawyers can do in the
face of an unjust procedural regime. It presents a new way of
understanding the forms of lawyer resistance to injustice. The Article
demonstrates that complicity and resistance are not on opposite poles
of human behavior within organizational systems. Rather, there is a
dualistic interplay between complicity and resistance. Acts that appear
to be resistance can be perceived as complicit, and acts that appear to
be complicit can result in powerful forms of resistance. The Article
also explores some questions raised by this analysis, such as what are
the lawyer’s responsibilities to society and to his or her client and
whether lawyers can know when a tribunal is so unjust as to merit
resistance. It concludes by considering avenues for further research.
RJE
November 4, 2009 in Recent Scholarship | Permalink
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341bfae553ef0120a64e943a970b
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Lahav on lawyering in unjust circumstances:
