New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Aviva Will | March 7, 2022
GCs and in-house legal departments, as the purchasers of legal services, are ideally placed to help #BreakTheBias and increase diversity in Big Law. There are a number of ways they can do this.
By Elliott B. Jacobson | March 4, 2022
As the mounting evidence makes clear, Putin is—and for a long time now has been—a war criminal.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Timothy R. Capowski, John F. Watkins and Sofya Uvaydov | March 4, 2022
This boundary-pushing has an erosive and corrosive effect.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By David Lenefsky | March 3, 2022
Peale was a lifetime learner. Everything new captured his attention and imagination. His mind was an index of everything.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Joel Cohen | March 2, 2022
Yes, Rakoff's procedural device might seem harsh on its face to the layperson or uninitiated, as if he was saying "the heck with what the jury thinks, I know better." Any litigating lawyer, however, would understand the rightness of a judge taking the decision away from the jury when the evidence presented at trial is simply legally insufficient.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Ethan Klingsberg, Damien Zoubek, Paul Tiger and Elizabeth Bieber | March 1, 2022
The direction of the SEC's proposal has the potential to be a win-win for constructive relations between investors and publicly-held companies.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Tatiana Akhund, Daniel Pollack and Katie Shipp | March 1, 2022
Law enforcement agencies have begun using the tools that traffickers have turned to—ads, chatrooms, dating sites—to conduct online raids targeting traffickers and individuals seeking to illegally purchase humans or their services.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Dawne Mitchell and Adriene Holder | February 24, 2022
At a time of crisis, when the vulnerable populations who routinely appear in Family Court need help the most, their legal issues have been deemed "non-essential."
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By William Josephson | February 23, 2022
A recent New York Times editorial responds to the efforts of a bipartisan group of senators to consider changes in the Electoral Count Act of 1887. But the editorial is not a good guide to what may need to be changed.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Frederick McRoberts | February 15, 2022
New York courts have spent decades defining provisions and, for the most part and with few exceptions, the modern litigator knows whether a provision is "general vs. specific." To suddenly "clear-the-board" would be impractical and drastically change New York Labor Law practice, unnecessarily.
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