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August 04, 2008 | New York Law Journal

AIA Document A201-2007, ConsensusDOCS 200 Forms

Brian G. Lustbader, counsel to Mazur, Carp & Rubin, writes that every 10 years or so, the American Institute of Architects revises its form construction documents. Those revisions are typically substantive and extensive, and the latest revisions, the 2007 form documents, are no exception. It is therefore of critical importance, he notes, that all parties to construction projects, owners, developers, construction managers, contractors, and subcontractors, carefully analyze the new documents with their counsel and make appropriate modifications before signing them.
13 minute read
March 09, 2005 | Legaltech News

Generating Profit From Technology

In the practice of law, technology decisions should focus on delivering top-notch client services. We should never use technology just to use it. Perhaps we need a version of return-on-investment, tuned to project the return on the dollars we spend on technology, says MicroLaw's Ross Kodner. He calls it ROLTI -- Return on Legal Technology Investment -- and he shows you how to use it.
7 minute read
The Global Lawyer: Arbitration Without Legitimacy
Publication Date: 2013-06-07
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Plenty has changed in a decade of investor-state arbitration. But not enough.

January 14, 2009 | Corporate Counsel

Renegotiation of Outsourcing Deals: Structured Method Works Best

Renegotiation of outsourcing contracts is likely on the agendas of companies confronting the realities of the current economic downturn and tightened yearly information technology and business process outsourcing operating budgets. Attorneys Richard Raysman and Peter Brown discuss strategies for renegotiation of outsourcing agreements and outline the structured negotiation approach that both the customer and vendor can take to prevent a revisiting of the agreement from turning into relationship failure.
12 minute read
June 10, 2009 | New York Law Journal

Realty Law Digest

Scott E. Mollen, a partner at Herrick, Feinstein and an adjunct professor at St. John's University School of Law, analyzes recent cases, including a finding that a property owner had a vested right to continue a non-conforming use where an inspector revoked a certificate of zoning compliance without prior notice or hearing.
15 minute read
September 30, 2013 | New York Law Journal

Modern Government Investigations Embrace Technological Advances

Daniel A. Schnapp and Ernest E. Badway, partners at Fox Rothschild, discuss the impact of the complex technology used in the financial world, the manner it may be used to run afoul of securities and other laws, as well as the government's development of tools to address the situation.
13 minute read
April 18, 2006 | Law.com

Meet the Litigator: H. Hunter Twiford III of McGlinchey Stafford

H. Hunter Twiford III, senior litigator at McGlinchey Stafford, is a big fan of technology. From legal tech to leisure tech, you probably won't find him without a gadget or two on him at all times. He wrote chapters on technology and law office management for the "Solo/Small Firm Handbook," but he finds time to watch "The Daily Show" and check out the latest in law blogs, as well. Find out what he considers the most important trend in legal technology and more.
2 minute read
January 19, 2011 | Law.com

Dealmaker Confidence High as M&A Starts Off New Year With a Bang

In a new burst of confidence, the first 10 days of 2011 saw $83 billion in deals hit the books. Among the biggest: a $13.7 billion merger that creates the largest utility in the U.S.
4 minute read
March 09, 2010 | New York Law Journal

Active Inducement in the Post-'Grokster' World

Richard Raysman, a partner at Holland & Knight, and Peter Brown, a partner at Baker & Hostetler, discuss the theory of active inducement in copyright law, the evolution of peer-to-peer technology over the past decade, and recent U.S. and foreign legal decisions and developments impacting copyright holders, file-sharing networks and Internet service providers.
14 minute read
September 30, 2009 | The American Lawyer

The Leader Board

These are the Global 100 firms with the largest number of lawyers outside their home countries. RPL and PPP statistics are for each firm's most recent fiscal year. The "CAGR RPL" and "CAGR PPP" numbers represent each firm's compound annual growth rate in revenue per lawyer and profits per partner, respectively, over the past five years. The first number in the "Foreign Presence" column is the number of lawyers the firm has outside its home country; the second is the percentage of lawyers outside the home country. For statistics on additional firms, see americanlawyer.com.
8 minute read

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