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June 20, 2013 | Corporate Counsel

How to Win a Negotiation

The key to getting your opponent to do something that is in your best interest is persuading your opponent that accepting your proposition is in their best interest. This is true no matter what you are negotiating.
6 minute read
July 26, 2005 | The Recorder

Blogs Make for Nasty Times in Workplace

According to one PR firm, 20,000 new blogs are created in the U.S. every day. But the blogging phenomenon is new enough that most companies have not established employee policies on the issue.
9 minute read
January 02, 2013 | Daily Business Review

Municipalities have much to address with digital billboards

Local governments must consider whether the evolution of sign technology will hurt or help their communities, writes Susan L. Trevarthen of Weiss Serota Helfman Pastoriza Cole & Boniske.
6 minute read
June 10, 2005 | New York Law Journal

Arbitration

Samuel Estreicher, the Dwight D. Opperman Professor Law at New York University School of Law and of counsel to Jones Day, and Steven C. Bennett, a partner at Jones Day, write that since the U.S. Supreme Court's 2003 decision in Green Tree Financial Corp. v. Bazzle, inclusion of an express waiver of the right to pursue class or collective action claims should be considered as a possible component of an employment arbitration program.
14 minute read
January 11, 2011 | The American Lawyer

Kirkland, Simpson Lead on $2.4 Billion Agrichemicals Deal

The two Am Law 100 firms teamed up with two Israeli shops to advise on the $2.4 billion sale of a 60 percent stake in Makhteshim Agan Industries, the world's largest maker of generic agricultural chemicals, to ChemChina.
3 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Pennsylvania Causes of Action, 12th Edition Authors: GAETAN J. ALFANO, RONALD J. SHAFFER, JOSHUA C. COHAN View this Book

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December 23, 2002 | Texas Lawyer

McBride v. State

2 minute read
October 20, 2006 | Law.com

A Malpractice Claim Waiting to Happen

When a law firm buys malpractice insurance, how clairvoyant must it be in predicting possible claims? A Hackensack, N.J., firm maybe should have seen one coming, since it purchased its policy at the tail end of an eight-year appeal of a dismissal of a suit as time-barred. According to the carrier, failure to sue on time was malpractice per se, and the firm had a duty to disclose it on the insurance application. A New Jersey appellate court agreed and denied coverage.
3 minute read
May 07, 2007 | National Law Journal

Chief justice ponders supreme court's declining caseload

The number of cases heard by the U.S. Supreme Court is declining in part because of the lack of significant legislation coming out of Congress, Chief Justice John Roberts said at the Alaska Bar Association's annual convention. "No one actually knows why the number of cases we are taking is declining," Roberts said Thursday. Another possible reason, he said, is that circuit courts can locate previous legal decisions online in cases where they might have once turned to the Supreme Court for guidance.
2 minute read
August 28, 2012 | The Recorder

People v. Mitchell

5 minute read
January 28, 2011 | The Recorder

DLA Piper Advises Velti in IPO

2 minute read