By Bruce Love | June 9, 2021
Firms such as Steptoe & Johnson and Kilpatrick Townsend are expanding international disputes capabilities because they see a pipeline of work coming down the road.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Ross Todd | June 9, 2021
Amazon Inc. last month quietly changed language on its website that routed disputes with customers into individual arbitration. Leaders at Keller Lenkner, a law firm that has invested heavily in developing the ability to represent large numbers of individual clients in arbitration, including more than 75,000 bringing claims against Amazon, welcomed the move but don't expect other companies to follow suit.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Bruce Love | June 8, 2021
Arent Fox began receiving unsolicited emails from inactive clients and prospects, mentioning the Malcolm Gladwell and Stanley Tucci events.
By Frank Ready | June 8, 2021
While California-based LegalZoom and Intapp filed their intentions to go public with the SEC last week, the road to an IPO may be difficult for other legal tech companies without a history of solid growth or the capacity to expand into other markets.
By Victoria Hudgins | June 4, 2021
Employers may have lost one legal mechanism for enforcing employee computer usage, but lawyers note Thursday's U.S. Supreme Court decision doesn't erase all remedies.
By Patrick Smith | June 2, 2021
"You have to be purposeful and tireless about it, and that takes time and attention," said Los Angeles-based Apalla Chopra, co-chair of O'Melveny's litigation practice.
By Rhys Dipshan | June 2, 2021
"I think firms are being asked to change quicker than they have in the past, maybe with the exception of last spring," says Sacramento-based Aaron Crews, chief data analytics officer at Littler Mendelson.
By Victoria Hudgins | June 1, 2021
Disabled attorneys say the pandemic finally proved what they've long tried to explain to law firms: Remote work isn't inferior.
By Amanda Bronstad | May 27, 2021
Federal judges are asking more questions prior to granting preliminary approval of class action settlements, partly due to 2018 rules changes, but also as lawyers have become more creative in how they structure such agreements. One example: The $2 billion Roundup settlement that a judge rejected this week.
By Ross Todd | May 24, 2021
U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers has often found herself as the only minority or woman with a speaking role in the tech-heavy antitrust cases she's overseen. The Epic Games v. Apple trial has been different on the front, and the judge has noticed.
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