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Five Years Into Dentons' Big China Merger, Integration Lags
In an exclusive interview with Law.com International, Dentons' global chairman Joe Andrew, global CEO Elliott Portnoy, and China managing partner Peng Xuefeng discuss the status of the combination five years out.'Amazonian Warriors' Lead Groundbreaking for Miami-Dade Civil Courthouse
Miami-Dade Circuit Chief Judge Bertila Soto and Judge Jennifer Bailey, the civil administrative judge, led the judicial campaign for new quarters.Former Ogletree Deakins Lawyer in Orange County Drops $300M Gender Bias Suit Against Firm
Both sides moved to drop the $300 million gender discrimination lawsuit Dawn Knepper had filed against her former firm. The lawsuit had been in arbitration for months.Former Ogletree Deakins Lawyer Drops $300M Gender Bias Suit
Both sides moved to drop the $300 million gender discrimination lawsuit Dawn Knepper had filed against her former firm. The lawsuit had been in arbitration for months.Mintz Gains New Antitrust Co-Chair From Crowell & Moring
Joseph Miller, who was on the steering committee of Crowell's antitrust practice group, joined Mintz in Washington, D.C. He said his clients would be moving with him to Mintz.View more book results for the query "*"
With Remote Access, Are Firms Risking a 'Backdoor' to Ransomware?
Law firms may think phishing attacks are their top cybersecurity concerns, but cybersecurity experts say thieves are also targeting their remote monitoring and management tools for critical client data.Lawyers Union in New Zealand Grows as it Campaigns for Fair Wages
The union was formed last year to represent lawyers and other workers in the legal workplace. It aims to stop the "unfair treatment" of younger lawyers and represent marginalized groups of legal workers, including women, people in the LGBTQ+ community, people of color, the disabled and New Zealand's indigenous people, the Maori.Reopening Suppression Hearings: The Trilogy Is Complete
In his Criminal Law and Procedure column, Barry Kamins discusses a recent decision, 'People v. Cook', which is the last of a trilogy of decisions that began over 40 years ago, and which define a court's discretion to reopen a suppression hearing in a number of contexts.Litigator Asim Rehman Joins NYC Law Department as Chief of Staff to Jim Johnson
A co-founder and former president of the Muslim Bar Association of New York, Rehman has also done extensive pro bono work and has engaged with government agencies and community groups on a range of civil rights issues.The Emergency Doctrine Revisited
The theory behind the common law "emergency doctrine" is that a person in such a situation cannot reasonably be held to the same accuracy of judgment or conduct as someone who has an opportunity to reflect, even if the decision turns out to be wrong. The need for the emergency doctrine has been called into question in recent years based on principles of comparative negligence and the ability of juries to apportion fault. As Thomas A. Moore and Matthew Gaier discuss in this edition of their Medical Malpractice column, while some states have abolished the doctrine altogether, New York has not gone so far.Trending Stories
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