By Colleen Murphy | March 29, 2024
It's one of the first times a theory of reverse redlining, an illegal and discriminatory practice of targeting a particular neighborhood or group for credit on unfair terms, has been put to the test in the educational sector, Lila Miller of Relman Colfax told Law.com. Typically, reverse redlining is often seen in connection with home mortgages or with car loans.
By D. Casey Flaherty, LexFusion | March 28, 2024
Generative AI will not eliminate lawyers, but will increase the demand for lawyers who are well-trained to work with these systems. The question is: How do law firms adequately provide that training when traditional methods no longer cut it in a modern world?
By Marianna Wharry | March 28, 2024
Tolson received her juris doctor from the University of Chicago Law School in 2005, where she was a member of the University of Chicago Law Review and won the Thomas Mulroy Prize for Oral Advocacy in the Hinton Moot Court Competition.
By D. Casey Flaherty, LexFusion | March 28, 2024
At a time when the rise of generative AI has the profession questioning if new lawyers are doomed to be underprepared, the inaugural ABA Business Law Section M&A Committee National Invitational proved otherwise, at least with respect to negotiation.
By Colleen Murphy | March 27, 2024
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar, ALM's source for immediate alerting on just filed cases in state and federal courts. Law.com Radar now offers state court coverage nationwide. Sign up today and be first to know about new suits in your region, practice area or client sector.
By Colleen Murphy | March 27, 2024
"I urge the court, there are a myriad of cases cited here, to please follow the verbs," counsel to the plaintiff, Richard I. Scharlat, a partner with Fox Rothschild said. "All the verbs talk about selection, appointment, the right to hire and fire. The verbs really do not extend to a defamatory statement post employment."
By Alex Anteau | March 26, 2024
The Superior Court of Athens-Clarke County ruled Georgia's criminal self-defense provision required the University of Georgia to expressly incorporate language adopting the standards of self-defense applied in criminal cases. The state Board of Regents appealed.
By Alex Anteau | March 25, 2024
"It's not just a question of what happened, it's a question of whether what UGA did was proper or not under state law," said appellee counsel Luke Boggs.
By Christine Charnosky | March 25, 2024
"I am excited to join the University of Baltimore as the dean of the School of Law as the university celebrates its centennial anniversary," LaVonda Reed said in a statement. "The school's commitment to excellence in teaching, impactful research and service to the legal academy and the profession is as inspiring as the people who make up this wonderful academic community."
By Marianna Wharry | March 21, 2024
The university also asked the court to declare the ACC's $140 million penalty to any university leaving the conference void by public policy and legally unenforceable. Clemson said the penalty imposes a nonexistent fiduciary duty on not only the university, but all conference members.
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