The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Jordan Furlong | December 17, 2021
A law firm's culture is defined by what is rewarded, what is tolerated, what is overlooked, and what is punished. At many firms, the outcome is jarringly different from what leadership might want.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Tony Mauro | December 15, 2021
After seven years of trying, Fix the Court is chalking up fixes that are coming to fruition at the Supreme Court.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Tony Mauro | December 8, 2021
The Supreme Court's gift shop is the (online) place for holiday presents for the SCOTUS aficionados in your life.
National Law Journal | Commentary|Expert Opinion
By Holly Gregory and Ellyce Cooper | December 2, 2021
Significant missteps occur when a corporate client reacts to a crisis with a "circle the wagons" approach, without regard for the importance of empathy, both in terms of communication and response, and in terms of internal consideration of the matter.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Dennis Aftergut | November 30, 2021
Donald Trump's primary goal is to delay the House Select Committee's investigation and run out the clock on this session of Congress. The substantive arguments favoring disclosure of Trump's White House documents are strong, and the D.C. Circuit should address them now.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Tony Mauro | November 30, 2021
Opinion announcements from the bench, a long tradition that is an important part of justices' public roles, may become a thing of the past
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Julie F. Kay | November 29, 2021
Over the past 30 years, the Supreme Court has heard oral argument on abortion rights in at least seven different cases. Each time abortion rights supporters feared it would be the end of Roe. Yet this time is different.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Ronak D. Desai | November 18, 2021
The fact that legislative subpoenas have become increasingly weaponized as part of the partisan combat reigning supreme on Capitol Hill is impairing Congress' authority to investigate and issue subpoenas.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Tony Mauro | November 18, 2021
Recent sharp-edged speeches by members of the high court have been controversial, but history shows that speechmaking by justices is nothing new.
By Stephen Masciocchi and Tina Van Bockern | November 17, 2021
The Tenth Circuit ruled that time devoted to booting up a work computer and launching certain software before clocking in is compensable under the Fair Labor Standards Act when these activities are integral and indispensable to an employee's principal work activities.
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