LIVE WEBCAST
Current Legal Ethical Issues with Professor Stephen Gillers
Tuesday, October 19, 2021 | 12:00 pm - 1:45 pm
Online registration is now closed. Please call Customer relations at 212 382 6663 to register or for assistance.
Program Fee:
$149 for Members | $249 for Nonmembers
Small Law Firm: $79 for Members
Members who are Law Students, Recent Law Graduates, Newly Admitted Lawyers (admitted for the first time in any state or country 2019-2021), In-House/Corporate Counsel, Judges, and attorneys that practice within the Government, Academic or Not-for-Profit sectors attend this program for free.
CLE Credit:
New York: 2.0 Ethics
New Jersey: 2.0 Professional Responsibility
California: 2.0 Professional Responsibility
Pennsylvania: 1.5 Professional Responsibility
Connecticut: Available to Licensed Attorneys
Description:
No matter your practice area or whether or not you have previously attended, you won't want to miss this program. Join us to hear this nationally renowned professor and ethicist address current issues of legal ethics. Programs typically feature distinct topics which are chosen close in time to the event to maximize topicality. The topics are geared to an audience of diverse interests. Audience questions and comments are encouraged.
Stephen Gillers has been a professor of law at New York University School of Law since 1978. He is the author of Regulation of Lawyers: Problems of Law and Ethics, a widely used casebook (11th edition 2018). In 2011, he received the ABA's Michael Franck Award, given annually for “significant contributions to the work of the organized bar.” He received the Outstanding Scholar Award from the American Bar Foundation in 2015. He was a member of the ABA's Multijurisdictional Practice and 20/20 Commissions. His most recent book is Journalism Under Fire: Protecting the Future of Investigative Reporting (Columbia University Press 2018).
This program will not be taped. You will only have the chance to see it - live!
Click Here to View Program Agenda & Faculty
Program Instructor:
Stephen Gillers, Elihu Root Professor of Law, New York University School of Law