By Karen Sloan | February 16, 2021
The American Bar Association's House of Delegates on Feb. 22 will consider a resolution calling for the organization to lobby federal lawmakers to ease the burden of loan repayment that many early career attorneys face.
By Karen Sloan | February 12, 2021
Law deans in New York, California and New Jersey have asked the American Bar Association to add a second round of graduate employment data collection, saying late bar exam results and pandemic lockdowns have hampered the ability of 2020 law grads to find work.
By Jason Grant | February 11, 2021
In addressing the ex-employee's related, disciplinary warning letter-based defamation claim lodged against Syracuse, the Appellate Division, First Department court wrote that "qualified privilege attaches to statements made for a supervisory purpose in an employment context."
By Jane Wester | February 11, 2021
The student, who was identified in the complaint only by her initials, is represented by Mariann Wang of Cuti Hecker Wang, who wrote that her client was 14 years old when she was offered a scholarship to the ninth grade at Dalton.
By Karen Sloan | February 10, 2021
More than 200 Harvard Law School students and alumni have asked the school to pledge not to hire senior officials from the Trump administration and lawmakers who supported his agenda.
By Karen Sloan | February 9, 2021
David Yellen is the former dean of the law schools at Loyola University Chicago and Hofstra University, and has been named the incoming CEO of the Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | February 3, 2021
Legal experts said the U.S. Department of Justice dismissal of a lawsuit filed on behalf of white and Asian Americans is one of many changes likely under the Biden administration.
By Karen Sloan | February 3, 2021
Jurisdictions will have a choice between offering an in-person July bar exam, or one delivered remotely.
By Karen Sloan | February 2, 2021
New York University law professor Deborah Archer has been elected as the president of the American Civil Liberties Union.
By Karen Sloan | February 1, 2021
A new report from AccessLex Institute identifies several ways that the pipeline of minority students into law school is breaking down, and its author says the numbers highlight how the legal industry's narrow focus on recruiting from the so-called "T-14" is perpetuating those inequities.
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