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Justine Rogers [4]Justin Rogers [1]
  1.  7
    ‘Fit and proper’ coders? How might legal service delivery by non-lawyers be regulated?Felicity Bell & Justine Rogers - 2022 - Legal Ethics 24 (2):111-140.
    With an upsurge of interest and investment in new legal technologies comes consideration of who is making them and whether these individuals or entities should be subject to regulation. This article looks at how such regulation might function in light of the existing regulatory regimes governing lawyers and the capacities of legal regulators. It considers the ramifications both of maintaining the existing system, or in extending some form of regulation to these new entrants to the legal services market.
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  2.  9
    ‘Fit and proper’ coders? How might legal service delivery by non-lawyers be regulated?Felicity Bell & Justine Rogers - 2022 - Legal Ethics 24 (2):111-140.
    With an upsurge of interest and investment in new legal technologies comes consideration of who is making them and whether these individuals or entities should be subject to regulation. This article looks at how such regulation might function in light of the existing regulatory regimes governing lawyers and the capacities of legal regulators. It considers the ramifications both of maintaining the existing system, or in extending some form of regulation to these new entrants to the legal services market.
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  3.  15
    Professional associations as regulators: an interview study of the Law Society of New South Wales.Deborah Hartstein & Justine Rogers - 2019 - Legal Ethics 22 (1-2):49-88.
    ABSTRACTProfessional associations, once the bodies responsible for professional self-regulation, have lost regulatory power. Some have entered into co-regulatory arrangements with state or independ...
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  4. James Rest's Four component model (FCM) : a case for its central place in legal ethics.Justine Rogers & Hugh Breakey - 2023 - In Julian S. Webb (ed.), Leading works in legal ethics. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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