By Stephen M. Duvernay and Joshua Spivak | September 1, 2022
The legislature is trying to say "look, we did reform the recall," but what this really means is "sucks to be you, general law cities," say Stephen M. Duvernay and Joshua Spivak of the California Constitution Center at Berkeley Law.
By Gorev Ahuja and Christina Ro-Connolly | August 25, 2022
By building a culture of collaboration and demonstrated employer empathy, workers throughout your organization will feel like part of a team.
By Patrick Hammon | August 25, 2022
Just like the Secret Service text messages concerning the Jan. 6 insurrection, deleted communications may be perfectly innocuous, but the act of deletion may be more concerning than the underlying data itself.
By Bethany Kristovich and Tyler Hilton | August 24, 2022
Nothing is perfect, and sometimes storms develop for reasons completely apart from the quality of legal work, but these tips can help mitigate the risk posed by transactions going bad.
By William W. Bedsworth | August 18, 2022
"I tell you all this so you can appreciate how much I identify with the German court that ruled workers' compensation applied to a man who hurt himself getting out of bed. Now that we're all doing so much of our work remotely, I may just move to Germany. They understand people like me there."
By Erin Levine and Camila Lopez | August 10, 2022
In response to criticisms that nonlawyer investors will force legal services providers to focus unduly on profits, justice technology founders Erin Levine and Camila Lopez say their "non-lawyer investors are often much less focused on short-term 'profit' than some lawyers we know."
By Andrew Peck, Chris Campbell, Leeanne Mancari and Christopher Young, DLA Piper | August 8, 2022
As a former federal magistrate judge and counsel representing clients in product liability and environmental matters in California courts, we have serious concerns about California's Senate Bill 1149.
By Shari L. Klevens and Alanna Clair | August 2, 2022
While lawyers are working anywhere and everywhere now, they can sometimes forget their surroundings in their efforts to be efficient.
By David A. Carrillo and Brandon V. Stracener | July 29, 2022
"If these laws survive, someday soon California will see a citizen enforcement law on the ballot as an initiative. It will be a grave threat to a minority group, who will fail to defeat the proposition because (as a minority) they lack the votes," say David A. Carrillo and Brandon V. Stracener of the California Constitution Center at Berkeley Law.
By Elizabeth Lampert and Lara Cupit | July 28, 2022
Once you have your information and provide a clear recommendation, strategy and tactics will follow smoothly, says Elizabeth Lampert, a crisis and media communications strategist, and Lara Cupit, a PR professional.
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