Board - certified DUI specialist Bubba Head is co-author of the «bible» on Georgia DUI laws: The Georgia DUI
Trial Practice Manual.
Georgia Trial Lawyers Association
Trial Practice Manual Seminar — Chapter Four: Procedural Points (2008)
Not exact matches
Androphy, White Collar Crime [W] Barnard, Florida Criminal Defense
Trial Manual [LL & L] BNA Criminal Law Reporter [BNA] Davis, Florida Criminal
Practice and Procedure [LL & L] Demers, Florida DUI Handbook (West's FL
Practice Series)[LL & W] LaFave, Criminal Procedure [LL & W] LaFave, Search & Seizure [LL & W] LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law [LL & W] Wharton's Criminal Law [LL & W]
A former Chair of the Construction Law Section of the Arizona Bar Association, former Legal Counsel to the Arizona Subcontractor's Association, a former Member of the Arizona State Board of Technical Registration, contributor to the Arizona Construction Law
Practice Manual (2nd and 3rd Editions), and frequent speaker, Julianne earned an AV Rating with Martindale Hubbell, served as a faculty member of the Arizona
Trial College, and is a Judge Pro Tem with the Maricopa County Superior Court (2017 - 18).
The Books UnBound database offers access to an extensive collection of State Bar CLE «brown binder» books, such as Wisconsin Civil Procedure Before
Trial, Traffic Law and
Practice in Wisconsin, Family Law Casenotes and Quotes, Wisconsin Civil Litigation Forms
Manual and more.
, Civil
Trial Practice Standards, American Bar Association, Feb. 1998, Saltzburg, Martin and Capra, Federal Rules of Evidence
Manual, 8th Ed., Appendix C.
Since the state's Law Reporting Bureaus oversees the publication of decisions of New York's intermediate appellate courts and some
trial decisions as well that
manual guides the writing of judges throughout the state and indirectly influences the citation
practices of lawyers submitting memoranda and briefs to them.
Fortunately, conducting randomized
trials over the decades, intervention researchers have produced numerous
manual - guided, evidence - based treatments (EBTs) for depression, anxiety, and conduct in youth.2 Unfortunately, these treatments have not been incorporated into most everyday clinical
practice.3 - 5 A common view is that the complexity and comorbidity of many clinically referred youths, whose problems and treatment needs can shift during treatment, may pose problems for EBT protocols, which are typically designed for single or homogeneous clusters of disorders, developed and tested with recruited youths who differ from patients seen in everyday clinical
practice, and involve a predetermined sequence of prescribed session contents, limiting their flexibility.3 - 8 Indeed,
trials testing these protocols against usual care for young patients in clinical
practice have produced mixed findings, with EBTs often failing to outperform usual care.7, 9