0 results for 'Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C.'
After Lateral Losses, Mintz Lands New Chair for Sports and Entertainment Practice
Steve Olenick is joining Mintz after the firm's previous sports practice co-chairs moved to Holland & Knight.After Lateral Losses, Mintz Lands New Chair for Sports and Entertainment Practice
Steve Olenick is joining Mintz after the firm's previous sports practice co-chairs moved to Holland & Knight.Lessons on Law Firm Management from Leaders Who Litigate
Here's what litigators who hold firmwide leadership positions say about what it takes to inspire confidence from colleagues and get things done.How Mintz's San Diego Office Is Working to Dismantle Systemic Racism, Police Brutality
Mintz is nominated for the California Legal Awards' Innovation in Diversity and Inclusion Award.View more book results for the query "Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C."
No Election Day Holiday This Year. Big Law Employees Have a Few Hours for Voting
Dechert, Kirkland, Jenner, Mintz, Cooley and others offered lawyers and staff additional flexibility to take time off for voting. But firms had little appetite for offering the whole day off.Who Got the Work?℠: Quinn Emanuel Defends Coinbase in $350M Patent Case and More
Welcome to "Who Got the Work?℠," a regular column that highlights the law firms and lawyers around the country who are being brought in to handle key cases and close major deals for their clients.Meet the Winners of the California Legal Awards
The Recorder is proud to announce this year's winners for the California Legal Awards, celebrating the achievements of lawyers and companies leading technology, innovation and the profession as a whole.Deal Watch: Twitter Deal Is Done, but the Legal Work Likely Isn't
Musk may turn to even move lawyers to battle looming disputes over severance agreements, among other issues.When the US Ups Its Investment Controls, Will China Deal Lawyers Feel More Pain?
A recent executive order issued by U.S. President Joe Biden heightened the level of scrutiny of inbound deals in certain sensitive industries. And now the U.S. is weighing legislation that calls for a "reverse CFIUS," which will add government scrutiny to outbound transactions.State AI Legislation Is on the Move in 2024
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