Masters of the Courtroom: Our 2018 Winning Litigators
ALM Staff
The lawyers in our 2018 special report scored big victories for their clients in high-stakes cases.
ALM Staff
The lawyers in our 2018 special report scored big victories for their clients in high-stakes cases.
Court watchers agree that privacy will be the biggest concern when courts begin to analyze how familial DNA searches are conducted.
They "seemed to get along beautifully," author James F. Simon discusses. Then everything changed.
Our editors and reporters reviewed more than 300 law firm submissions. These finalists excel in plaintiffs' client matters.
A record pace of shareholder class action filings continued during the first half of 2018—and the cases are getting much bigger, according to a midyear report released today.
Minh Vu and Kristina Launey
Website accessibility lawsuit filings are at an all-time high and, according to the projections, expected to keep climbing.
The National Law Journal collected available data on Brett Kavanaugh’s 48 clerks. Here are some of the findings on diversity, law schools and Supreme Court clerkships.
Since 2010, according to a newly updated study, female justices have been disproportionately interrupted in every term. In the 2016 term, for the first time, the ratio of female to male interruptions exceeded 2:1.
"Our sharp disagreement rate—34 percent of all signed opinions—was considerably higher than in prior terms," Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said this week, reviewing the term. The video, posted Friday, is below.
Erwin Chemerinsky
Democratic senators should focus on areas where Kavanaugh already has spoken publicly and expressed troubling views.