By Maria Dinzeo | April 10, 2024
"Just to be a mediocre lawyer in general, you have to understand AI," Glatstein told Berkeley Law's Irene Liu during an online event Tuesday. For those with higher aspirations, he said, "there's really no substitute for just digging in and doing the work."
By Trudy Knockless | April 4, 2024
Ralph Weber received his undergraduate degree from the school and for a quarter-century has taught a trial-advocacy class there. Now, Weber is taking the legal reins at the 11,000-student institution.
By Christine Charnosky | April 4, 2024
"You've got to name it to tame it," said Patrick Krill.
By Maria Dinzeo | April 3, 2024
"As more people leave, there's more work to do, causing more people to leave. It's a potentially vicious cycle that can, ultimately, spin out of control," said a report from Axiom and Wakefield Research.
By Christine Charnosky | April 3, 2024
"It is definitely a challenge for women leaders because we often second guess ourselves," said Danielle Conway, dean of Penn State Dickinson Law, adding, "What I took from that experience was do not discount how you are observing and experiencing a situation."
By Michael A. Mora | April 3, 2024
"That pressure led them to decide that they should resolve the case for their insurance policy limits," said Robert Fiore, an attorney for the estate.
By Christine Charnosky | April 1, 2024
An ABA council has not articulated a rationale for departing from the current practice or identified the problem that the proposed revisions to Standard 102 and 306 are intended to solve, according to a comment signed by 26 law deans from schools across the country.
By D. Casey Flaherty, LexFusion | March 29, 2024
Generative AI's ultimate impact on the delivery of legal services is already in motion. To meet it, the legal industry must embrace practical training now, which will not only be driven by AI, but also extend to AI itself.
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?
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