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Order in the courtroom determines whether justice can move forward. In this episode of "The Trial Lawyer's Handbook," litigation attorney Dan Small examines the essential role judges play in the adversarial system through his pro bono work in Uzbekistan and the mock case State v. Faulkner. Drawing parallels to the Farmers Export and Rendle cases, Mr. Small shows how trial lawyers must balance forceful advocacy with respect for judicial authority. He recounts how an Uzbek judge, unfamiliar with the referee role, struggled to manage competing advocates until a makeshift gavel helped establish control. Mr. Small concludes that a fair adversarial system depends not only on skilled advocates but also on judges who can enforce rules and maintain fair, balanced proceedings.
By Holland & Knight4.8
1212 ratings
Order in the courtroom determines whether justice can move forward. In this episode of "The Trial Lawyer's Handbook," litigation attorney Dan Small examines the essential role judges play in the adversarial system through his pro bono work in Uzbekistan and the mock case State v. Faulkner. Drawing parallels to the Farmers Export and Rendle cases, Mr. Small shows how trial lawyers must balance forceful advocacy with respect for judicial authority. He recounts how an Uzbek judge, unfamiliar with the referee role, struggled to manage competing advocates until a makeshift gavel helped establish control. Mr. Small concludes that a fair adversarial system depends not only on skilled advocates but also on judges who can enforce rules and maintain fair, balanced proceedings.

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