Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Care and rights: two ways of perceiving the world
- 2 The lawyer's role: partisanship, neutrality, and moral distance
- 3 Personal morality: the orientation of lawyers toward rights and care
- 4 Personal morality and attorney role: changing perceptions of professional obligation
- 5 Women lawyers: archetype and alternatives
- 6 Toward a more morally responsive advocate
- Appendix I Coding Manual
- Appendix II Figures and tables
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Appendix I - Coding Manual
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Care and rights: two ways of perceiving the world
- 2 The lawyer's role: partisanship, neutrality, and moral distance
- 3 Personal morality: the orientation of lawyers toward rights and care
- 4 Personal morality and attorney role: changing perceptions of professional obligation
- 5 Women lawyers: archetype and alternatives
- 6 Toward a more morally responsive advocate
- Appendix I Coding Manual
- Appendix II Figures and tables
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Section A of this coding manual uses conceptualizations by Carol Gilligan and colleagues to identify rights and care reasoning (Brown et al., “Reading for Self and Moral Voice;” “Coding Manual,” Gender, Education, and Human Development Study Center; Lyons, “Two Perspectives”). Throughout the manual we are mindful that the “distinction between justice and care cuts across the familiar divisions between thinking and feeling, egoism and altruism, and theoretical and practical reasoning by reconstructing the meaning of these terms” (Brown et al., “Reading for Self and Moral Voice,” 4). After the Coding Manual was developed, it was sent to Carol Gilligan, Jane Attanucci, and Kay Johnston from whom we received helpful comments.
What is being measured in the Coding Manual is not discrete words but a point of view, a way of seeing moral problems. Often words like “justice,” “truth,” “obligation,” and “fairness” are employed by attorneys with either orientation. These words may mean different things to the individual, depending on the underlying orientation that organizes moral perceptions. Even though the “lawyer talk” of rights and justice frequently appears in all the interviews, these words mean different things to different people. (See particularly Chapter 3 for examples.)
After having been trained to understand and identify rights and care orientations in narratives, coders relied on the following manual in order to code the interviews.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Moral Vision and Professional DecisionsThe Changing Values of Women and Men Lawyers, pp. 172 - 187Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989
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