Law.com

Top StoriesThursday, May 23, 2013

null

Law School Offers a Second Chance for Rejected Students

A law school is allowing rejected applicants to enroll in a free course. Applicants who do well can earn a spot in next year's 1L class.

video center

Eric Turkewitz on Legal Blogging

Eric Turkewitz, of The Turkewitz Law Firm and author of the New York Personal Injury Law Blog, offers dos and don'ts for first-time legal bloggers.

null

Suit Alleges Law Firm Botched Legal Malpractice Action


2:35 P.M. ET

A mortgage loan origination company has filed a malpractice suit against a law firm for allegedly botching claims against other lawyers.

null

No Law License for Undocumented Immigrant, DOJ Says


2:27 P.M. ET

The Justice Department has told Florida justices that federal law bans the state from giving a law license to an undocumented immigrant.

null

Juror's Online Research Forces New Trial


1:05 P.M. ET

Jurors' Internet searches are a growing problem. Just ask the California court that tackled a worst-case scenario involving a curious juror.

null

Vermont Becomes First State to File 'Patent Troll' Suit

Vermont is seeking an injunction against a company that has demanded $1,000 per employee from businesses for use of its scanning patents.

more headlines

featured product

Tweets from ALM Reporters, Editors

Law.com Blog Network

Lateral Moves in The Am Law 200

The Am Law Daily (paid-access) | May 21, 2013

K&L Gates hires two renewable energy partners in Portland; King & Spalding poaches from Bird & Bird to establish a London trade practice; and a fourth Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft partner leaves the firm for O'Melveny & Myers.

See all legal blogs

 

More Stories From the Web

Other Voices from the Legal Web

Special Reports view all special reports »

Am Law 100 2012

The American Lawyer

All the key financial metrics for The Am Law 100 rose by single digits last year: gross revenue, revenue per lawyer and profits per partner. Eighty-three firms posted revenue gains, 25 more than in the prior year. Firms reversed course and added to their head count. Even equity partners grew their ranks on average after two years of flat or negative growth. But as a rule, income inequality continued to plague the rankings.

 

The Haves and the Haves Less
 

Gross Revenue: Vereins Top List

 

Am Law 100 Interactive Chart

 

25 Years of The Am Law 100

 
VIEW ALL OF THE "AMLAW 100"
NLJ 250

The National Law Journal

After three years of flat to negative growth, 2011 was when the nation's 250 largest law firms started getting bigger again. Headcount among NLJ 250 firms was up a collective 2,132 lawyers, for a growth rate of 1.7 percent -- in line with the average increase during the past 10 years, but well below the 4 to 5 percent growth of 2005-2008. Growth was far from universal in 2011; while 118 firms on the list added lawyers, 109 shrank and eight were flat.

 

A Time to Grow, Once Again

 

Full NLJ 250 Survey Results

 

Newcomers to the NLJ 250

 

NLJ 250 Regional Report

 
VIEW ALL OF THE 'NLJ 250'
Am Law 200 2012

The American Lawyer

In a year when The Am Law 100 posted tepid year-over-year financial gains, Second Hundred firms bested their bigger rivals on most counts but still fell short on the bottom line. And while the two groups had comparable profit margins, the Second Hundred had less success turning top-line growth into profits. The culprits? Steep expenses and a sharp drop in leverage.

 

Overview: Expense Report

 

Striking the Right Balance (interactive chart)

 

Gross Revenue

 

Revenue per Lawyer

 

The Firms, A to Z

 
VIEW ALL OF THE "AMLAW 200"
Go-To Law Schools

The National Law Journal

The economy began to rebound in 2011, but that wasn't enough to get firms to rev up associate hiring. We rank the top 50 law schools by percentage of 2011 J.D. grads who took jobs at NLJ 250 firms. We also identify the schools where NLJ 250 firms recruited the most graduates and the law schools that saw the most alumni promoted to partner in 2011.

 

It's Tough Out There

 

The Go-To Law Schools

 

Firm Favorites of 2011

 

Associates Promoted to Partner

 

Biggest Bang for the Buck?

 
VIEW ALL OF THE REPORT
 
 
 
 
 

lawjobs.com View More »

null

Four Essential Steps to Take Before Changing Law Firms

Daily Report

When changing jobs, the worst-case scenario is to leave a position at one law firm, only to learn that you cannot join the new firm or -- more commonly -- to be surprised by something that dramatically affects your acceptance of an offer. Here are four ways to minimize risk when deciding whether to make a move.

TOP JOBS
  • search jobs | post job | news & views | the careerist
  • Powered by the Martindale Hubbell® Rating System

    About ALM  |  About Law.com  |  Customer Support  |  Reprints  |  Privacy Policy  |  Terms & Conditions |  ALM User License Agreement