By Law.com Contributing Editors | April 22, 2024
Law.com wants to hear from you about how these divides are affecting law firm operations, employee communication, expectations, and law firm culture.
Daily Business Review | News|Research
By Michael A. Mora | August 16, 2022
"There has not been a more powerful time to be an American worker and to be able to shape how you work," said Gregory Brumfield, employment practice area lead at Lex Machina.
Corporate Counsel | News|Research
By Jessica Mach | April 27, 2022
Attorneys have refined their strategies after seeing most of their early cases tossed out of court.
By Amanda Bronstad | April 21, 2022
About 16% of attorneys appointed to leadership roles in multidistrict litigation created in 2021 identified as nonwhite, up slightly from 14% in 2020. In 2016, only 4% went to nonwhite attorneys.
The American Lawyer | Research
By Gina Passarella Cipriani | March 30, 2022
We invite anyone working in a law firm of any size and location to take this anonymous survey on mental health in the legal profession. Detailed analysis will be provided back to the community.
By Dan Packel | February 8, 2021
But there are substantial opportunities to bridge the divide, say the authors of a new survey.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | February 2, 2021
For women associates of color especially, the needle is moving so slow that "just doesn't bode well for partner numbers down the road," NALP executive director James Leipold said.
By Amanda Bronstad | August 17, 2020
"It's very rare, and as a result kind of disappointing, but when it happens it's wonderful," said Oakland-based Tycko & Zavereei partner Sabita Soneji, of landing leadership roles in multidistrict litigation.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 29, 2020
The "Securities Class Action Filings – 2020 Midyear Assessment," compiled by Cornerstone Research and the Stanford Law School Securities Class Action Clearinghouse, found that there were 182 new class action securities filings through June 30, an 18% decrease from the second half of 2019 and the lowest since the end of 2016.
By Ross Todd | July 15, 2020
Vanderbilt Law professor Terry Maroney has proposed a new "psycho-legal theory" of judicial temperament as an alternative to the current folk wisdom on the topic.
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