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The ethics of legal professions are concerned with issues of what work lawyers should do, how they should perform their work, and, particularly, how they should treat clients and others. The promise of ethical conduct is one reason why governments grant a monopoly over legal services to legal professions. Ethical rules and practices often have deep historical roots, but the issue of ethics has strong contemporary relevance because of ongoing debates about whether the professions serve the public interest. Scholars define professionalism in various ways. Some see it as a system of controlling an occupation or the control an occupation has over the market for its services. Professionalism is also associated with a person's adherence to a set of standards, codified or accepted as characterizing accepted practice in an occupation. Structurally, this is supported by collegiality in the professional group.

Professions are associated with norms of behavior that exceed or are different from the ordinary norms of society. This is partly because they are concerned with the profession's work, the way it is conducted, the etiquette surrounding it, and standards of performance. These norms are usually codified in codes of conduct. The precise details of the ethical regimes of different legal professions vary considerably. Similar concepts are often used, but detailed implementation depends on the scope of the profession's work, its history, traditions, and culture, the role of other professions in the same field, and relationships with the state. Professional norms change slowly, reflecting the changing circumstances in which professions operate.

Virtues

Professionals are expected to possess virtues that enable them to deliver the social good that justifies their role. For lawyers, this good is justice, and doing justice is considered an important virtue for professionals to aspire to. Another goal of professionalism is a spirit of public service, a willingness to place others' interests first. The goals of justice and public service are supported by traditional virtues including honesty, integrity, wisdom, and independence. There has been a shift in the literature concerning the interpretation of the ethical ends that lawyers might pursue. Some suggest that professionals should promote the autonomy of the individual, particularly that of their clients, and have more regard for third-party interests.

Legal Roles and Duties

Distinctive legal ethics emerge from the way lawyers construct their work and the way they conceive of their role in delivering justice. Historically, this was defined by the relationship between lawyers, clients, and courts because appearing as advocates in court was the rationale for the existence of lawyers in the early medieval period. Legal work today is much more diverse than court work alone, but traditional ethics based on court work, such as the duty of confidentiality, apply equally to other areas.

The foundation of professional ethics is the relationship with clients. This special relationship imposes strict obligations on professionals, including duties to be diligent in handling clients' affairs, to avoid conflicts of interest, and to respect confidences. These duties are so fundamental that they are recognized, protected, and enforced by courts as well as by the professions. Professionals are expected to balance their duties to clients with wider interests. Advocates often owe a duty to the court, often most clearly manifest as a duty not to mislead the court. Such a duty might include an obligation to draw to the court's attention authorities not referred to by the opposing advocate, which are material to the case, even when such authorities are harmful to their own case.

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