By Avaneesh Marwaha, Microsystems | September 1, 2017
Your firm's knowledge about millennials—how they work, what they value, and what motivates them—can help them help you. Here's six ways to get started.
By Amanda Jones and Bruce Hedin, H5 | August 29, 2017
The application of keywords before using TAR should not be based on an "always" or "never" rule. These seven categories of questions can help make your determination.
By Samantha Joseph | August 22, 2017
A closely watched multimillion-dollar suit before Florida's Supreme Court could change Florida rules on expert testimony.
By Jonathan D. Klein | August 9, 2017
Your first few weeks as a young attorney at a new job (in the public or private sector) will be a whirlwind of trainings, signing forms, meeting your fellow attorneys and potentially even getting that terrifying first assignment. It should also involve introductions to your nonattorney colleagues—assistants, paralegals, office managers, supply managers, etc. While it is obviously critical for you to produce an excellent work product and develop a good reputation for yourself among your fellow attorneys, it is equally critical—though too often overlooked—that you learn (and quickly) how to properly interact with and treat your nonattorney colleagues.
By Jeffrey M. Pollock | August 7, 2017
A primer on the use of in limine motions -- an under-deployed weapon in the trial lawyer's arsenal.
By Meredith Hobbs | July 31, 2017
While a summer job at a large firm is lucrative, a bumper crop of law students is taking low or no-paying public interest jobs instead, in part because it's a way to gain hands-on legal experience.
By Samantha Joseph | July 21, 2017
Andres Rivero was on a yearslong winning streak when he learned a personal lesson about "shades of gray" that made him walk away from gleaming prospects and a coveted job.
By Diane W. Whitney | July 20, 2017
If a manufacturer of a product knows that the product will, or could, cause harm to people with a genetic sensitivity to it, must it issue a warning? That question opens up a whole panoply of concerns.
By Jason Huebinger | July 19, 2017
It is common for lawyers to dabble in creative writing. Some writers may also dabble in the law, but there is greater risk in that arrangement.
By Andrew M. Shaw | July 17, 2017
The three-part test for piercing privileges, established by the New Jersey Supreme Court in "Kozlov," is not dead yet.
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Legalweek New York explores Business and Regulatory Trends, Technology and Talent drivers impacting law firms.
McCarter & English is actively seeking a 5th-6th year trademark associate who has trademark prosecution, licensing and litigation experi...
**PLEASE READ THE COMPLETE AD BEFORE APPLYING***Established 25-year boutique Plaintiff's Personal Injury Law Firm in the Dadeland area seeki...
Our client, a multi-state full-service boutique, is seeking to add a senior construction litigation associate to their Florida team. Qualif...