Sentences with phrase «model law really»

How much does the new Model Law really achieve?

Not exact matches

«Our traditional assumptions of ownership are really frustrated by these digital distribution models,» said Aaron Perzanowski, an associate professor of law at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland.
Conservatives can not push enough Democrats and wobbly moderates toward greater comfort with originalist - like its - the - only - Constitution - we've - got thinking, can not get them to sacrifice the judicial avenue to what they see as policy goodies, or get them to really censure the kinds of unconstitutional short - cuts Obama is modeling, if they think that folks like you and I believe that Real originalism would ban hours - laws, collective bargaining, etc..
Great post, and the really disproportionate thing about it is this is all done using the «law» demanding the tithe when not one New Testament book endorses this model (The reference in Hebrews was not to establish tithe as it was to establish Jesus in a different order, and his comments in the gospels was to people living under the law)... how is it that no other «law» is preached with the same force and conviction as tithing?
«In the past, federal charter laws were really focused on growing new models, and that was very appropriate when the charter movement was getting launched.
That's what we're working toward, to really change the model for animal care and control, and to change the law.
Quite a lot for us humans, really, but not for knowing what is REALLY going on c) GR or QG are like newton's gravitational laws a mathematical model that tries to explain what gravity wireally, but not for knowing what is REALLY going on c) GR or QG are like newton's gravitational laws a mathematical model that tries to explain what gravity wiREALLY going on c) GR or QG are like newton's gravitational laws a mathematical model that tries to explain what gravity will do.
If some economist says there is no link between cigarettes and disease, I really don't want them having anything to do with modeling healthcare policies or tobacco - control laws.
The problem is your toy model can't show any of what is really going on, and saying the greenhouse gases warms the Earth is starting out admitting that your model violates the 2nd Law.
Aaron: I think how it translates, how it ties into kind of the Gary Vaynerchuk model and how it's useful for lawyers to at least think about how they could be doing some stuff is there is now this trend in Facebook, Instagram videos of 1 to 2 minute videos with interesting video content and overlaid text that's kind of rapid fire overlaid text and you can convey by combining interesting visual content with well written but very short text content, you can convey a fair amount of information in just dozens of words, not even hundreds or thousands, and those at least in the current of multimedia online content are the kinds of things that are performing really well on the internet do a great job of conveying a small amount of information and are interesting for readers and catch them where they are because it is absolutely a fact that no one wants to read a law firm's full length press release about a case they won or an award an attorney got or whatever.
I guess you alluded to it but sometimes when people go solo, they have like a really well defined philosophy of how they want to practice law, their client service model innovations that they want to incorporate.
It's not just the industry as a whole that's changing, and we talk about that a lot, but really it's the individual lawyers thinking outside the box, pushing the boundaries of what we've been taught in the traditional model, and just getting out there and delivering legal services in new ways that's really forming what we call this future of law practice.
I strongly suspect that merely «adapting» current law offices to a franchise model won't work — you really need greenfield operations, launched specifically as part of a franchise system.
As time went on and we began just really testing all aspects of the firm it became pretty clear that it was going to be difficult to have any sort of a low cost model that also provided attorneys great benefits and great wages and had a profit margin that I wanted the law firm to have so a spin off company was created, Access Legal to make sure that that mission was still fulfilled while the law firm was able to evolve into a healthier business.
Dan's index doesn't really break out plaintiffs» law firms from those using the billable hour model but he agreed it would be interesting analysis to see what if any the differences were.
She works at a major international law firm — Hogan Lovells is a serious power house — but is part of the next tech savvy, innovative generation focused on what her clients really want and are not restricted by historic client / lawyer models.
When we think about the law today, I think you see revolutions in shared service centers, law firms are really rethinking that business model.
One, they are getting a lot larger, we know that, but fundamentally that's not about sort of more seats and chairs, it's really a new business model and it's affecting how law firms invest in technology, how they think about technology, how they think about process, how they think about their business models, that's going to be really what that opening session is about is exploring that whole space and talking about how those changes are impacting all the conversations that will be happening throughout Legalweek in all the different streams and in all the different sessions.
If the old model was, a lawyer comes out of law school and joins a firm, does a lot of grunt work in the first few years to not only sort of learn how to research, but learn how to think like a lawyer and learn how to really work for that firm and for a client; that model may be shifting more and more to lawyers going straight to in - house counsel, where they don't get the first couple of years of law firm training.
There are so many shifting elements in law practice, including IT, billing models, etc., it is really hard to get hold of it all.
«Forty - three percent of CLOs say they don't really care about a law firm's delivery model as long as they get the results they want at a competitive price,» says the new 2014 Chief Legal Officer Survey by Altman Weil.
I have to say, it is really convenient to manage ebooks with the Irwin Law eBrary model.
I think this model would also work well in a 30 person firm and could be combined with a physical law office to really use the best of both worlds.
The premise for this resource is that many traditional law firm business models and cost management strategies (read reward more billable hours) are not aligned with what corporate clients really want and need: value - driven, high - quality legal services that deliver solution for a reasonable cost and develop lawyers as counselors (not just content - providers), advocates (not just process - doers) and professional partners.
From my understanding of the report, what they mean by that is training in law practice management on one side and business model innovation on the other, but not really «training in innovation» nor «technological innovation».
I'd challenge you and ask how different that really is from the current law school model.
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