Thomas D. Morgan
Thomas D. Morgan is the Oppenheim Professor Emeritus of Antitrust and Trade Regulation Law at George Washington University Law School. He teaches antitrust law and professional responsibility.
A lecturer and consultant to law firms on questions of professional ethics and lawyer malpractice, Morgan was selected by the American Law Institute as one of three professors to prepare its new Restatement of the Law Governing Lawyers, and by the American Bar Association as one of three professors to draft revisions to its Model Rules of Professional Conduct.
He has been dean of the Emory University School of Law, a professor at the University of Illinois and Brigham Young University, a visiting professor at Cornell, and a visiting scholar at Oxford. In 1990, he served as president of the Association of American Law Schools.
Thomas D. Morgan
Sep 19, 2011
If this symposium is asking the single question whether U.S. jurisdictions should deregulate the practice of law, my answer has to be no. My problem is that the question itself conflates at least three questions, and the answers to each should be different. The first question is whether people other than licensed lawyers should be ... Thomas Morgan on Realistic Questions About Modern Lawyer Regulation