Putting the Legal House in Order: Responses to New Zealand Lawyers who Break Trust

Legal Ethics 15 (2):315-334 (2012)
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Abstract

Governance and discipline of the legal profession is a highly topical issue in the New Zealand and has been the subject of recent reform, with a move to a more co-regulatory structure. An explanation of that context follows, together with an overview of how the Disciplinary Tribunal under the Law Practitioners Act 1982 and its successor under the Lawyers and Conveyancers Act 2006 approach strike-off or suspension as the penalty in what would currently be termed 'misconduct' cases. Case studies and comparisons of the responses under the prior and current regimes are included. Finally some conclusions are drawn about whether the sanctioning of lawyer deviance is changing

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