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Features

Proving Your Insurance Claim Image

Proving Your Insurance Claim

Daniel G. Lentz & Ryan D. Pratt

Many companies have taken lessons from catastrophic events such as 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina and developed business-continuity plans to protect their people and assets and to restore operations as quickly as possible. While these plans are instrumental in restoring a company's operations, many miss an important aspect of any continuity plan — the programs and protocols that must be in place to prove losses related to the incident and recover funds from an insurance company.

Features

Navigating State Guaranty Funds: What to Expect When Your Insurer Is Insolvent Image

Navigating State Guaranty Funds: What to Expect When Your Insurer Is Insolvent

Gerald R. Kowalski & Jodi D. Spencer

Your insurance company is insolvent. Now what? Your state guaranty fund may provide some relief, but is it worth pursuing? As explored in this article, that depends.

The Subprime Mortgage Crisis and D&O Insurance: A New Frontier of Litigation Image

The Subprime Mortgage Crisis and D&O Insurance: A New Frontier of Litigation

Nancy D. Adams

Whether a D&O policy will afford coverage for the litigation resulting from the collapse of the subprime mortgage lending industry is yet to be seen. As discussed in this article, there are several policy provisions that are likely to be relevant in the subprime context.

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Movers & Shakers Image

Movers & Shakers

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Information about the advancement of lawyers in the patent profession.

Features

Don't Get Caught With Your Patents Down Image

Don't Get Caught With Your Patents Down

Terry Ludlow

Part One of this series discussed the history of licensing and the need to prove infringement. This month's installment addresses patent trolls and the rise of the Asian IP powerhouse.

Searching for BRICS Image

Searching for BRICS

John H. Hornickel

The worldwide patenting landscape is undergoing slow but inevitable tectonic shifts. During the first half of this century, the oligopoly of the United States, Europe, and Japan as the source of the vast majority of new ideas will be broken with the rise of innovation concentrated in other nations beyond the Trilateral, as the USPTO, EPO, and JPO are known.

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Intellectual Property: Currency of the New Economy Image

Intellectual Property: Currency of the New Economy

Keith Bergelt

This article considers the way in which the capital markets view IP assets and the means by which IP is emerging as the currency of the new economy.

Five Significant Inter-Generational Relations Blunders Image

Five Significant Inter-Generational Relations Blunders

Phyllis Weiss Haserot

Firms are struggling with generational divides because they make the blunders enumerated in this article.

Features

It's No Coincidence: The Successful Firms Have Strong Management and Leadership Image

It's No Coincidence: The Successful Firms Have Strong Management and Leadership

Robert W. Denney

Nothing is as important to the success of a law firm as strong leadership at the top. Yet, in far too many firms, the partners are still reluctant to give anyone the CEO authority needed for effective management and leadership.

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Advancing Women in Law Firms Image

Advancing Women in Law Firms

Jennifer Bluestein

This article lays the groundwork for those in power to learn how they can help women lawyers succeed.

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MOST POPULAR STORIES

  • Private Equity Valuation: A Significant Decision
    Insiders (and others) in the private equity business are accustomed to seeing a good deal of discussion ' academic and trade ' on the question of the appropriate methods of valuing private equity positions and securities which are otherwise illiquid. An interesting recent decision in the Southern District has been brought to our attention. The case is <i>In Re Allied Capital Corp.</i>, CCH Fed. SEC L. Rep. 92411 (US DC, S.D.N.Y., Apr. 25, 2003). Judge Lynch's decision is well written, the Judge reviewing a motion to dismiss by a business development company, Allied Capital, against a strike suit claiming that Allied's method of valuing its portfolio failed adequately to account for i) conditions at the companies themselves and ii) market conditions. The complaint appears to be, as is often the case, slap dash, content to point out that Allied revalued some of its positions, marking them down for a variety of reasons, and the stock price went down - all this, in the view of plaintiff's counsel, amounting to violations of Rule 10b-5.
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  • Meet the Lawyer Working on Inclusion Rider Language
    At the Oscars in March, Best Actress winner Frances McDormand made “inclusion rider” go viral. But Kalpana Kotagal, a partner at Cohen Milstein Sellers &amp; Toll had already worked for months to write the language for such provisions. Kotagal was developing legal language for contract provisions that Hollywood's elite could use to require studios and other partners to employ diverse workers on set.
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