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Resources on
eLawyering
Law
Firm Web Sites that Demonstrate eLawyering
Resources on
Unbundling Legal Services
American Bar Association
Task Force on eLawyering
ABA Section on Business Law - Some Call it eLawyering
Disrupting Conventional Law Firm Business Models Using
Document Assembly by Darryl R. Mountain
The New
Economy and the Virtual Law Firm of the Future
Re-Training
Lawyers for a Digital Age
Law
Firm Productivity: How to Work Smarter - Not Harder
The
Impact of the Net on the Delivery of Legal Services
Creating a Virtual Law Practice
Internet Bar Organization
Internet Marketing for Lawyers
eLawyering Trends by Richard S. Granat
The Many Faces of eLawyering by Marc Lauritsen and Richard S. Granat
Working on Work by
Marc Lauritsen
Improving the Delivery of Affordable Legal Services Through
the Internet: A Blueprint for the Shift to a Digital Paradigm
By William Hornsby
The Future of Law: Facing the
Challenges of Information
Technology
(Clarendon Press: Oxford 1996),
Richard
Susskind (see
Website
for additional articles on this topic .)

http://www.illinoisdivorce.com - Illinois
divorce firm
http://www.visanow.com - Nationwide immigration
law firm
http://www.mdbankruptcylaw.com - Maryland
consumer bankruptcy firm
MDFAMILYLAWYER.COM
- Maryland virtual law firm that offers legal services to pro
se litigants over the Internet.
Allen & Overy -
Major London law firm creates New Change Project to deliver legal services
virtually. See
innovative document drafting process on-line.
Beckman & Hirsch - Iowa law firm that uses
web-based document assembly.

http://www.unbundledlaw.org
This web site, hosted by the Maryland Legal Assistance Network, originated with
the convening of a national conference on “The
Changing Face of Legal Practice: A National Conference on ‘Unbundled’ Legal
Services” in October 2000. The site contains the
documents and recommendations from the conference as well as a bibliography,
ethics opinions, profiles of local programs, and updates on activity at the
national and state level.
Unbundled Resource Center This
web site, hosted by the American Bar Association’s Standing Committee on the
Delivery of Legal Services, includes a bibliography of articles, books, case
law, ethics opinions, and court rules related to unbundled legal services.
Mosten Mediation
This web site, hosted by family lawyer and mediator Forrest
(Woody) Mosten, includes links to resources for lawyers and clients interested
in the unbundled model of service delivery.
The Maryland Experiment
Articles on Limited Legal Services
(Many of these articles are older articles and focus on the
delivery of limited legal services off-line, not on-line.)
Barrie Althoff,
Limiting the Scope of Your Representation: Questions of Cost, Candor, and
Disclosure, Washington State Bar News (July
1997). Barrie Althoff,
Limiting the Scope of Your Representation: When Your Client Wants, or Can
Afford, Only Part of You, Washington State Bar
News (June 1997).
Courts and the Self-Represented -- The Road Ahead
(Editorial), American Judicature Society,
Vol. 84, at 300 (May/June 2001).
Anthony P. Capozzi,
Responding to the Pro Per Crisis, California Bar
Journal (February 2004). John
Greacen,
Self-Represented Litigants and Court and Legal Services Responses to Their
Needs: What We Know, (2002).
Paula L. Hannaford-Agor,
Helping the Pro Se Litigant: A Changing Landscape,
Court Review, p. 8, (Winter 2003).
William Hornsby,
Improving the Delivery of Affordable Legal Services Through the Internet: A
Blueprint for the Shift to a Digital Paradigm,
ABA Standing Committee on the Delivery of Legal Services (Nov. 1999).
Early article on ethics and lawyers and unbundling:
Barrie Althoff,
Unbundling Your Law Practice – Opportunities and Dangers, Seattle
University School of Law presentation on Current Developments in Ethics and
Professionalism (October 2002).

California
California Rules of Court, Rule 5.70, Nondisclosure of
attorney assistance in preparation of court documents,
permits a lawyer to draft pleadings in family law matters without disclosure.
California Rules of Court, Rule 5.71, Application to be relieved as counsel upon
completion of limited scope representation,
details the procedure governing limited appearances in family law matters.
California Report
on Self-represented litigants:
http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/programs/cfcc/resources/publications/actionplanrpt.htm
New York
Early article on ethics and lawyers and
unbundling:
http://www.freecle.com/materials/current.html

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