Blogging about all sorts of things--governance in higher education, in businesses, and in law firms; bankruptcy ethics; popular culture & the law; Enron & other corporate fiascos; professional responsibility generally; movies; ballroom dancing; and anything else that gets my attention.
Monday, March 17, 2008
Some thoughts on Jeff Skilling's appeal and his allegations about the suppression of exculpatory evidence
The more I see groups of people making obviously bad decisions with clearly foreseeable repercussions, the more I realize that law has very little power to regulate human behavior unless the law takes into account the fact that humans tend toward certain types of cognitive errors. For how my frustration with legal "fixes" for problems plays out with Jeff Skilling's allegations of prosecutorial misconduct, see my post (here) over at the Legal Profession Blog.
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Enron,
Ethics,
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