Angela Zambrano of Sidley Austin. Courtesy photo Welcome to another edition of our Litigation Leaders series, featuring the litigation practice leaders at some of the biggest and most innovative law firms in the country.
Angela Zambrano of Sidley Austin. Courtesy photo Welcome to another edition of our Litigation Leaders series, featuring the litigation practice leaders at some of the biggest and most innovative law firms in the country.
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Strategies that have recently been successful may not always be the most intuitive for the lawyers involved, but can lead to resolutions that leave plaintiffs feeling like they’re walking away with “enough” and defendants like they’ve minimized risk.
Partners at plaintiffs firms who participated in Law.com’s “How I Made It” series emphasized figuring out how discrete tasks fit into broader litigation strategy and learning to work with—and for—a broad spectrum of people.
Retired Latham & Watkins partner Tom Heiden discusses the American College of Trial Lawyers’ latest over-subscribed training program aimed at developing a broad, diverse bench of lawyers capable of taking a case to trial.
Jesse-Justin Cuevas, who made partner at Susman this year, is passionate about opening doors for the next generation of legal practitioners and mentoring junior litigators.
“Over its 200-year history, Linklaters’ litigation, arbitration & investigations division has evolved from a supplementary service run by clerks to a flagship practice handling the world’s highest-value and most impactful disputes.”