0 results for 'AllBright Law Offices'
Top Clifford Chance Partner Switches to King & Wood
Top Clifford Chance capital markets partner Rupert Li has left the Magic Circle firm to join Beijing's King & Wood as international managing partner -- making him the second senior-level partner in the past week to join a domestic Chinese firm from a U.K. firm. Such moves point to the growing market strength and prestige of the leading Chinese firms, which are increasingly dominating "inbound" China practices, even among multinational clients.China's King & Wood Brings On International Arbitration Specialist From Pillsbury
Leading Chinese law firm King & Wood has recruited Pillsbury Winthrop's former managing partner for Beijing as a member in its international arbitration department. Mary "Meg" Utterback will continue to work in Shanghai for the Beijing-based firm. She joined Pillsbury's Shanghai office in 2008 and specializes in international arbitration, construction law and foreign direct investment. Utterback is just the latest China-based partner to jump from an international firm to a domestic one.Chinese Firms Confront Generational Gripes Over Compensation
The Chinese legal profession is young -- the oldest private firms date back less than 20 years -- but it is already confronting an age-old problem: how to balance the prerogatives of established senior partners while encouraging the next generation of firm leaders, especially in determining pay.View more book results for the query "AllBright Law Offices"
Chinese Hire Drill: MegaMerger Has Many Switching Allegiances
Ropes & Gray has recruited the Shanghai chief of legacy firm Hogan & Hartson as the much-touted union of Hogan Lovells went live over the weekend (1 May).Increasing Competition in China Causes Friction for Law Firms
In China the rules state that U.S. firms can't practice Chinese law nor can the Chinese lawyers who work for them. Since the influential Shanghai Lawyers Association denounced what it said were Western firms' widespread violations of those rules, leaders of foreign and domestic firms have been abuzz over the possibility of a government crackdown. The use of Chinese lawyers as "legal consultants" isn't the only cause of friction between foreign and Chinese firms.Increasing Competition in China Causes Friction for Law Firms
In China the rules state that U.S. firms can't practice Chinese law nor can the Chinese lawyers who work for them. Since the influential Shanghai Lawyers Association denounced what it said were Western firms' widespread violations of those rules, leaders of foreign and domestic firms have been abuzz over the possibility of a government crackdown. The use of Chinese lawyers as "legal consultants" isn't the only cause of friction between foreign and Chinese firms.Chinese Firms Confront Generational Gripes
Young partners at Chinese firms often complain more senior partners earn all the money while they do most of the work. But their managers say that's the way things should be.Trending Stories
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