The recession has pressured law firms, in-house legal departments and law schools alike to provide competent legal services at a lower cost, while also promoting work-life balance.
“Now, you’ve got to be an attorney and a businessperson” to survive in today’s competitive legal market, said Deborah Epstein Henry, the keynote speaker for a panel convened by Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton’s Atlanta Women’s Initiative to discuss how the legal industry is responding to these pressures.
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