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November 21, 2011 |

Successful Bar Candidates — July 2011 Bar Examination

Notice to the bar.
28 minute read
June 01, 2007 |

Focus Europe: The Arbitration Scorecard

74 minute read
November 10, 2011 |

First Into Seoul? No Thanks

As Korea has inched toward liberalization of its legal market, there has been much speculation about which international law firms will be first into Seoul. With the U.S. Congress ratifying a free trade agreement with Korea last month, the race must be on, right? Not exactly.
5 minute read
November 07, 2011 |

First Into Seoul? No Thanks

The Korean legal market is on the verge of opening up, following the U.S. passage of a free trade agreement. But many of those expected to lead the charge are not exactly chomping at the bit.
5 minute read
July 13, 2012 |

Law Firms Crowding Into Korea

It's long been clear that international law firms were eager to enter the Korean market. Some 16 U.S. and U.K. firms have either applied to open an office in Korea or publicly stated their intention to do so since the beginning of the year. Can the Korean market support those kinds of numbers? It's far from clear.
6 minute read
July 09, 2012 |

Crowding into Korea

Some 16 international firms have already applied to open in Korea or have publicly announced plans to do so. Still more are likely to go in. Is the market big enough for all of them?
6 minute read
July 01, 2011 |

Shaking Up the Old Order

Korea's new post-graduate law schools are stirring up controversy.
5 minute read
October 29, 2012 |

British Firms Ponder Korea Without Koreans

Herbert Smith is sending two non-Korean partners to lead its Seoul office, highlighting the demographic and regulatory challenge British firms face in the newly-opened market.
6 minute read
May 29, 2008 |

Recruiter loses bid to collect merger fee from Blank Rome

A Manhattan judge has rejected a legal recruiter's attempt to collect a merger fee from Blank Rome, which rejected the recruiter's proposed combination with a small New York firm but later completed the deal with the help of a different search firm. The e-mail exchange between Mark Bruce International and Blank Rome did not constitute an enforceable contract because the parties had not agreed on the terms of a fee, Supreme Court Justice Herman Cahn ruled.
3 minute read

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