Texas Lawyer | Commentary|Expert Opinion
By Kenneth Artz | December 23, 2021
"Clients have made some impressive moves such as hiring candidates without interviews, hiring candidates on the spot, and generally tidying up their recruiting process so they don't lose out on landing the talent they want and need," Grossman said.
Texas Lawyer | Commentary|Expert Opinion
By Suzanne Wilson, Brian Stansbury, Joe Eisert, Arlene Hennessey, Marcella Burke, Jim Vines and Cynthia Stroman | December 23, 2021
This is arguably the most significant TCEQ rulemaking in two decades and would impact a wide variety of industrial companies that have catastrophic events at their facilities.
By Nate Robson | December 23, 2021
Just in time for December holidays: A Supreme Court recipe for eggnog, unearthed from the papers of Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone.
By Wendie Childress | December 23, 2021
It will take time and patience for judges to dig out of backlogs and for in-person jury trials to resume at normal levels. David Slayton, director of administration for the Texas courts, estimates that addressing the backlog will take "anywhere from three to five years."
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Lizzy McLellan | David Gialanella | December 21, 2021
What can law firms do to get ready for the youth of tomorrow as they begin arriving?
Texas Lawyer | Commentary|Expert Opinion
By Craig Poulton | December 20, 2021
A look at flood devastation and attempts to repair a broken federal flood insurance system.
Texas Lawyer | Commentary|Expert Opinion
By David McFarland | December 20, 2021
The financial impact of COVID-19 on small businesses highlights the need for business insurance as a safety net.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Jordan Furlong | December 17, 2021
A law firm's culture is defined by what is rewarded, what is tolerated, what is overlooked, and what is punished. At many firms, the outcome is jarringly different from what leadership might want.
Texas Lawyer | Best Practices|Commentary|Expert Opinion
By Kenneth Artz | December 16, 2021
'All firms are going to have to be incredibly flexible, especially on the work environment and allowing remote work because we've already crossed the Rubicon and there is no going back, especially with the Millennials.'
Texas Lawyer | Commentary|Expert Opinion
By Randy D. Gordon | December 16, 2021
The most common trial tactic is the objection, which can be used for a substantive purpose (e.g., keeping out inadmissible evidence like hearsay) or a merely strategic purpose (e.g., disrupting an examination that is going too well or casting suspicion on unfavorable evidence).
Presented by BigVoodoo
Join General Counsel and Senior Legal Leaders at the Premier Forum Designed For and by General Counsel from Fortune 1000 Companies
Celebrating achievement, excellence, and innovation in the legal profession in the UK.
Join the industry's top owners, investors, developers, brokers and financiers for the real estate healthcare event of the year!
Description: Fox Rothschild has an opening in the New York office for an attorney in our renowned Labor & Employment Department, working...
Our client, a large, privately-owned healthcare company, has engaged us to find an Assistant General Counsel for their headquarters located ...
A prestigious matrimonial law firm in Garden City is seeking a skilled Associate Attorney with 5 to 7 years of experience in family law. The...