Book contents
- The Good Chinese Lawyer
- The Good Chinese Lawyer
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Good Legal Education
- 2 The Law Practice Landscape of Greater China
- 3 Values, Ethics and Virtue in Lawyering
- 4 Connecting Character to Lawyers’ Roles
- 5 Truth and Deception
- 6 Professional Secrets
- 7 Conflicts of Loyalty and Interest
- 8 The Morality of Competence
- 9 Practical Wisdom for Lawyers
- Appendix Safety Nets for Lawyers
- Index
3 - Values, Ethics and Virtue in Lawyering
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 March 2023
- The Good Chinese Lawyer
- The Good Chinese Lawyer
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Good Legal Education
- 2 The Law Practice Landscape of Greater China
- 3 Values, Ethics and Virtue in Lawyering
- 4 Connecting Character to Lawyers’ Roles
- 5 Truth and Deception
- 6 Professional Secrets
- 7 Conflicts of Loyalty and Interest
- 8 The Morality of Competence
- 9 Practical Wisdom for Lawyers
- Appendix Safety Nets for Lawyers
- Index
Summary
Legal ethics challenges us to do the right thing when no one is looking. Beware the lawyer who tells you that something is ‘arguably legal’. Clinical legal education in your law school helps with the answer, because it places you in contact with real clients and teaches how to be a moral lawyer. But do we choose the right thing according to law only, or law and something else? Here, we use a detailed table to examine how Chinese relational ethics are strengthened by comparisons with Western duty-based and virtue ethics frameworks, in contexts including: understanding duty versus (v) knowing your values; education through law or through character development?; asking what should I do v who should I be, v to whom do I owe respect and obedience?; action v character v harmony; rightness v excellence v social cohesion; absolute duties v judgment in choosing virtues v the Confucian balance between all; general principles v particular circumstances v loyalty in pursuit of harmony; reason v emotion v respect in relationships; rule logic v caring perspectives v appropriate role relationships; and the contrasts between universal values, cultural relativity and the political community.
Keywords
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- Information
- The Good Chinese LawyerA Student Guide to Law and Ethics, pp. 80 - 124Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023