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Hybrid | When and Why Might We ‘Cancel’ Lawyers?

14 October 2024, 6:15 pm–7:15 pm

book cover and picture of speaker

This event is kindly co-sponsored by Kingsley Napley and the Centre for Ethics and Law at »Ê¼Ò»ªÈË Laws

Event Information

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Organiser

UCL Laws

When And Why Might We 'Cancel' Lawyers? Brad Wendel, in conversation with Julie Norris and Steven Vaughan

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About this event

Lawyers take pride in a professional tradition of representing unpopular clients, understanding it as a contribution to the rule of law and the practice of toleration in a polarized society. This does not mean, however, that lawyers are fully insulated from criticism for the clients they represent. Much of the frustration experienced by lawyers who are criticized for representing unpopular clients arises from what lawyers see as the public's inability to understand the rule of law and the function of the legal system in resolving conflicts over rights and justice.

In his new book,ÌýCanceling Lawyers, Brad Wendel (Edwin H. Woodruff Professor of Law at Cornell Law School)Ìýdraws on a series of case studies to argue that there is genuine value in a system of formal law that aims at settling social disagreement, but that is not the whole story. Public criticism of lawyers may reflect the sense that the legal system has fallen short of ideals of fairness and inclusiveness. Accepting a certain amount of public criticism is necessary to avoid a dangerous isolation of the legal profession from accountability to the broader political community, or from the humanity of lawyers being submerged by their professional role.

This ‘In Conversation’ event will see Brad discuss a number of the ideas and arguments in his book with Julie Norris (Partner in the Regulatory Team at Kingsley Napley) and Steven Vaughan (Professor of Law and Professional Ethics at University College London).

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Speakers

(Cornell Law School)

(Kingsley Napley)

(UCL)

About the Speaker

Professor W. Bradley Wendel is one of the world’s leading legal ethics’ scholars, trained as both a lawyer and a philosopher. He has a B.A. from Rice University, a J.D. from Duke Law School, and an LL.M. and J.S.D. from Columbia Law School, in legal philosophy.

Before entering academia, Professor Wendel clerked for Judge Andrew J. Kleinfeld on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Fairbanks, Alaska, and practiced as a products liability litigator in Seattle. He started his academic career at Washington and Lee Law School and moved to Cornell Law School in 2014.

About the Centre

UCL's Centre for Ethics and LawÌýpromotes and enhances collaboration between corporates, practitioners, civil servants, academics and others around the broad themes of professional ethics and the ethics of risk.Ìý.

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