By Alexander M. Geisler | November 13, 2018
Talent, expertise and knowledge is the foundation but the differentiator is how a lawyer applies those skills to deliver the client to a desired result.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Vivia Chen | November 13, 2018
A lawyer's schedule is unrelenting and difficult for nursing moms, and there's an attitude that productivity suffers due to breast pumping on the job.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Joanna Litt | November 12, 2018
The wife of Sidley Austin partner Gabe MacConaill shares her story.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Vivia Chen | November 7, 2018
Despite a few victories for women, the midterm elections primarily showed that they are not united and that the #MeToo anger that was supposed to knock out President Donald Trump's supporters and the sexism and racism he represents didn't happen.
By Jenna Greene | November 7, 2018
How often does a judge get to decide an issue of first impression from the Mesozoic Era?
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Pamela Falk | November 6, 2018
The president's assertion that he can, and will, disavow the ingrained U.S. cultural tradition (as well as legal mandate) that birth on U.S. soil renders citizen stature, with only a few historic exceptions, deserves careful analysis.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Jeremy Silverman and Mark A. Wade Jr. | November 5, 2018
Although certain key legal and business issues are common to most M&A deals regardless of industry sector, unique issues arise in M&A transactions involving federal government contractors.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Jenna Greene | October 31, 2018
According to local D.C. lore, a ghost of U.S. Attorney Philip Barton Key II—looking at times like a dark shape or a real person—has been spotted in Lafayette Square, haunting the vicinity of the Federal Circuit courthouse.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Debbie Shon and Mayur Patel | October 30, 2018
Courts are prepared to ensure government officers act within the boundaries of the law. These are the types of trade cases that have succeeded in the past—and the type we should expect in the coming months.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Ria Tabacco Mar | October 30, 2018
Congress may be able to clean up the law, but it can't fix the damage to the U.S. Supreme Court if it bows to political pressure to scapegoat transgender people.
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