dc.contributor.author |
Victoria J. Haneman |
dc.coverage.spatial |
United States |
dc.date.accessioned |
2016-01-07T15:29:12Z |
dc.date.available |
2016-01-07T15:29:12Z |
dc.identifier.uri |
http://desa1.cejamericas.org:8080/handle/2015/3543 |
dc.description.abstract |
This article begins in Section I with a brief overview of the debt industry. Section II describes the circumstances of an unrepresented defendant in the adversarial system of justice. The conventional codes of professional responsibility are weighed against a broader framework of normative ethics in Section III. Section IV illustrates how the particulars of the debt-buying setting are emblematic of broader issues. Two solutions are then discussed in Section V: One broadly targets the failure of attorneys’ ethical codes to account for the collapse of the adversarial myth in cases involving unrepresented litigants; the other is a more tailored solution that addresses the specific abuses in the industry which serves as the concrete setting for the Article. |
dc.language.iso |
English |
dc.title |
The Ethical Exploitation of the Unrepresented Consumer |
dc.ceja.source |
Fuente: Missouri Law Review |