![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjwKlEi7pzgxmo0vQDlDBMMEAiDi18MpaT69bu69V_S7XHc48W2-RUeAIe7TFtlpZnn2kg0SFBnPCjsXcR83tXfdTQnw0wR3Or0wJgN5F-3Y1_KyepDSmouSRot1FgwiQLtU_JkWwGCXiiJNU2TDWAAmwS7f-c9A09iIrUDTkUckOtodQLJRX0_/s320/McKern.jpg) |
Leo McKern as the titular character in the TV series Rumpole of the Bailey
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In
St. Mary's Journal on Legal Practice & Ethics, Thomas Bulleit—a former partner in the law firm Ropes & Gray—looks at the role of client self-determination and the ways that this may conflict with the barrister's aims in
John Mortimer's Rumpole of the Bailey short stories.
(hat tip to Law & Humanities blog)
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