Two new developments promise to affect medical-malpractice litigation profoundly.
- April 22, 2011Chad L. Staller
When women's initiatives work well, the benefits inure not only to individual women, but to their firms and to the profession more broadly. What's good for female attorneys is good for their male counterparts and good for business.
April 22, 2011Carol FrohlingerBy setting clear guidelines and limiting lawyers' obligations, a law firm's marketing staff will make it more likely that their lawyers will be successful new business generators.
April 22, 2011Bob GeroGenerational differences need to be embraced and bridged to convey a consistent brand of business development, service delivery and client transitioning from generation to generation.
April 22, 2011Phyllis Weiss HaserotThe following tools are some of the latest to cross our radar ' and the author has found them to be remarkably useful.
April 22, 2011Nicholas GaffneyTechnology and the explosion of social media have not only changed the game, they have permanently altered the playing field. Now the small law firm and the multinational giant have the same capacity to reach their audience.
April 22, 2011Thalia ZetlinPart One of this article in last month's issue discussed the litigation faced by manufacturers and purveyors of food. Part Two herein addresses the relevant legislation.
April 22, 2011Sarah L. OlsonThe Congressional and NHTSA investigations of Toyota may be finished, but the litigation surely is not ... there are, for instance, over 100 consolidated class actions and product liability cases in federal court alone.
April 22, 2011Nicholas J. WittnerCurrently, undocumented aliens injured on the job in the U.S. may recover damages for lost earning capacity, but this area of law is in flux. Here's what you need to know.
April 22, 2011Chad L. StallerThe increasing use of nanotechnology, and the strong opinions of its proponents and detractors, suggest that nanotechnology could become the focus of governmental regulation or meaningful litigation in the very near future.
April 22, 2011Shane Prince

