0 results for 'US Department of Health and Human Services'
Big Law's Cybersecurity Needs Are Shifting in a 'Very Uncertain World'
"We're in a different world of practicing the law today," one technologist said.From Sex Traffickers to Serial Killers, Some Progress Has Been Made in Connecticut
Compassion for victims represents a step forward for society.Air Pollution Agency Created 'Systemically Discriminatory' Workplace, 2 Former Employees Claim
The lawsuits filed by attorneys at the Joseph Saveri Law Firm claim that leaders of the Bay Area Air Quality Management District have enforced gendered dress codes, mocked an African American woman's hair and have made derogatory remarks about women's bodies.Pop Vapor Sues FDA, Claiming It Denied E-Cig Application Due to Product's Length
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.View more book results for the query "US Department of Health and Human Services"
Amid Growing Regulations, 'Digital Dragnets' Likely to Bring Litigation Risks for Private Sector
More states and federal agencies are rolling out policies restricting the use of geolocation data, posing risks for enterprises that leverage such information for marketing purposes.A Year Later: How Has Data Privacy Changed in a Post-'Dobbs' World?
Though the ramifications of the Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization ruling are still unfolding, it seems the definition of data privacy has expanded in the U.S., giving consumers more rights and tools to exercise control over their data.3 Ways an Intake & Triage System Helps Legal Teams Address Burnout and Increase Efficiencies
Automation allows legal teams to control what work that they do—and how they go about doing it—while radically increasing their department's productivity.Recent Win at SCOTUS for Rights of People With Disabilities
People with disabilities and their advocates maintain a meaningful avenue to address violations of rights.Attorney Fee Provision in Pa.'s Clean Streams Law May Run Afoul of 14th Amendment
This article argues that requiring a permittee to pay the attorney fees of a third-party challenger to a permit in the absence of bad faith on the part of the permittee would violate the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.Trending Stories
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