By Elisa Reiter and Daniel Pollack | November 6, 2024
"The question of whether parents should be allowed to videotape CPS workers and court-appointed professionals during home visits is complex," write Elisa Reiter and Daniel Pollack.
By John G. Browning | November 5, 2024
"Spinach may be good for you, but not as a name for your child, according to one court in Australia," writes columnist John G. Browning.
By Xakema Henderson | November 4, 2024
"These theories ... are commonly characterized as the exposure, manifestation, injury-in-fact, and continuous trigger theories," writes Akerman's Xakema Henderson.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Adam J. Levitt | November 4, 2024
Arguing Class Actions is a monthly column by Adam J. Levitt for the National Law Journal.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Krishnan Nair | November 3, 2024
On November 6, whether it's Harris' or Trump's America that the world wakes up to, little will change the fact that Big Law is retreating westward, writes The Global Lawyer.
By Gabriel Salinas, David Weiss and Marco Portillo Diaz | November 1, 2024
"A considerable level of uncertainty is likely to dominate the Mexican legal landscape for the foreseeable future," write Gabriel Salinas, David Weiss and Marco Portillo Diaz of Mayer Brown.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Caroline Byrne | October 27, 2024
As the legal industry grapples with the rise of AI, the once-immutable billable hour faces unprecedented scrutiny.
By Quentin Brogdon | October 25, 2024
"Although the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination is not absolute, the Texas Supreme Court found it trumps the discovery needs of civil litigants, even if the privilege effectively bars a civil action from proceeding forward," according to Quentin Brogdon of Crain Brogdon.
By Michael P. Maslanka | October 24, 2024
"Teaching the basics (like how to wax a car, sand a floor, paint the fence) applies as well to learning the foundational techniques of effective deposing," writes columnist Michael P. Maslanka.
By Elisa Reiter and Daniel Pollack | October 23, 2024
"A legislative update to the Texas Family Code in 2021 prevents the Department of Family and Protective Services from removing a child solely based on a parent testing positive for marijuana," write Elisa Reiter and Daniel Pollack.
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