National Law Journal | Commentary
By Allison Brown and Christina Marinakis | July 21, 2020
As states tentatively reopen, courts across the country are grappling with unprecedented challenges to resuming jury trials safely.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Matthew Collette | July 20, 2020
While the effort to foster transparency is laudable, the decision to limit disclosure to borrowers receiving loans over $150,000 leaves a large amount of information undisclosed. The public will remain in the dark as to three-quarters of the entities who received PPP loans.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Eric Tirschwell and Mark Frassetto | July 20, 2020
The high court's decisions this term confirm that there is no conflict between the Constitution and reasonable, commonsense gun laws that save lives, Eric Tirschwell and Mark Frassetto argue.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By David Cross and Eric Olson | July 16, 2020
As with any expert, courts should restrict economists to what they actually know, and limit their testimony to appropriate scientific studies based on reliable principles and data.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Felice Gray-Kemp, April Miller Boise and Ernest Tuckett | July 15, 2020
A group of legal executives working to increase the numbers of Black general counsel in the Fortune 1000 spotlights the need for greater diversity in corporate leadership roles.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Michael D. Jones | July 14, 2020
Mike Jones' great grandfather, Floyd Washington, was born in about 1845 as an enslaved person and fought with the 76th Infantry, U.S. Colored Division. Jones discusses how that history shaped his path as a litigator and his mission.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Thalia González and Rebecca Epstein | July 9, 2020
The harms of police presence in school are well-established—especially for students of color. Restorative justice is a tested, modest solution that can help.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Vivia Chen | July 7, 2020
Meet the Am Law 100 firms where Black partners are barely existent or powerless.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Erin Hawley | July 7, 2020
The Great Outdoors Act creates a massive, permanent and mandatory expense line-item in the U.S. budget for the purchase of federal land. With nearly one-third of the U.S. already in federal hands, why does the national government need more land?
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Mark MacDougall | July 6, 2020
If black lives matter, then eliminating death row as a vestige of institutionalized racism that marks American law will be a fitting legacy of George Floyd and those who march in his name.
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