In the past, it was often the only place that would reliably publish
articles about legal writing or its pedagogy.
Not exact matches
Washington, DC
About Blog Read the latest
legal writing articles and posts on briefwriting, editing, judges, professional development, style, tone, and more from Ross Guberman.
In an
article released last week
written by «New Mexico Senate Democrats [
about] PED Bullying [in] Las Cruces Public Schools,» democratic senators are arguing that the PED is «overstepp [ing] its
legal authority» in a state in which such «bullying tactics» have no place in educational policy.
I have linked below an
article I
wrote about choosing a free font for your book, as well as a variety of font foundries and other
legal sources for free fonts.
We must continue to measure every act against not only what is
legal but also what we would be happy to have
written about on the front page of a national newspaper in an
article written by an unfriendly but intelligent reporter.
Washington, DC
About Blog Read the latest
legal writing articles and posts on briefwriting, editing, judges, professional development, style, tone, and more from Ross Guberman.
Washington, DC
About Blog Read the latest
legal writing articles and posts on briefwriting, editing, judges, professional development, style, tone, and more from Ross Guberman.
Heck, even when Kotaku (UK)
wrote a series of investigative
articles about this on - going farce, the noise was deafening; but so far, no
legal threats that we know of.
The
article, which is part one of two, presents wisdom from great nonlawyer writers
about two key elements of
writing that are equally important in the
legal world: precision and conciseness.
The
Legal Workshop features short, plain - English articles about legal issues and ideas, written by an author whose related, full - length work of scholarship is forthcoming in one of the participating law rev
Legal Workshop features short, plain - English
articles about legal issues and ideas, written by an author whose related, full - length work of scholarship is forthcoming in one of the participating law rev
legal issues and ideas,
written by an author whose related, full - length work of scholarship is forthcoming in one of the participating law reviews.
This
article about website content
writing was republished from «
Legal Marketing 102: Websites for Small Law Firms.»
Attorney Reza Breakstone
writes about the
legal ramifications of self - driving cars in an
article published in the Winter 2016 - 2017 edition of The Litigator, the official publication of the Capital City Trial Lawyers Association in Sacramento, California.
She also
writes articles for
legal journals
about insurance law and related issues.
Last fall, St. Louis personal injury lawyer Spencer Farris
wrote a guest
article about Apple's new tablet for our sister site,
Legal Media Matters, titled, Apple iPad Review for Lawyers.
Verity regularly
writes articles for
Legal Voice
about access to justice.
Here are some recent
articles I recommend: The SCOTUSblog Success Story I've
written several times
about SCOTUSblog (most recently here and here), which stands out among
legal blogs as one of the best, if not the best.
In addition to the holidays, I argued at the Fifth Circuit; published two
articles at The Huffington Post (here and here); produced a podcast episode on appellate practice for the ABA's Sound Advice series; gave a presentation to the Dallas Bar Association (
about the post-election Supreme Court and Trump's list of possible nominees); participated in a panel discussion
about e-briefs and
legal writing at the annual meeting of the Council of Chief Judges of State Courts of Appeal (in North Carolina); was cited on SCOTUSblog and the Appellate Advocacy Blog (both here and here); and was quoted by Bloomberg (here, here, here, and here), CNN, and the Winnipeg Free Press.
This month I've got an
article forthcoming in Texas Lawbook (
about the Garland fiasco and Trump's possible SCOTUS nominees); I'll be in Austin on January 20, leading a workshop on
legal writing at Lawyer Forward; and I'll be in Utah January 21 - 24.
In another story, we
wrote here in November
about Columbia Law School Professor William Simon's
article criticizing three prominent
legal - ethics professors for giving bad
legal advice with potentially large public consequences.
The site is operated by Lexbe.com, a company that I've
written about before for a similar site it operates, Litilaw, which provides access to
legal articles written by lawyers for CLE programs or publication.
For an
article I am
writing, I am looking to hear from
legal professionals
about their experiences with LinkedIn.
The new site is operated by Lexbe.com, a company that I've
written about before for a similar site it operates, Litilaw, which provides access to
legal articles written by lawyers for CLE programs or publication.
Recently, I set up a Google alert that sends me
articles about legal -
writing topics.
In the course of updating an
article I
wrote last year
about legal - ethics resources on the Web, I came across Ethics and Lawyering Today, a monthly electronic newsletter highlighting important new cases, ethics opinions, and other developments, often with links to full text documents.
Martindale - Hubbell today added a new feature to its martindale.com Web site — a library of in - depth
articles,
written by lawyers,
about a variety of
legal topics.
In two earlier
articles, I have
written about discoursal identities, voice, and self in
legal writing.137 The discoursal model of those
articles both echoes and elaborates on Alcorn's model and offers a way of understanding ethos in modern
legal texts.
So
legal trends report is all
about data and how important that is and I even
wrote an
article for the ABA
about a year ago on how on — the number one thing that lawyers are not focusing on which is data and how it can impact their practice.
The Volume begins with four
articles that address broad issues encountered by
legal writing professors and others concerned
about the quality of
legal writing, analysis, and reading.
Some of our colleagues at UNLV have conceptualized the evolution of
legal writing scholarship as a series of leaps.2 The first big leap was to take an interdisciplinary approach to
writing about teaching
writing.3 The second leap was to build community by creating spaces of our own, such as LWI, the Journal, and then later, JAWLD.4 The third leap was to develop a rich, often interdisciplinary approach to studying and
writing about legal writing.5 In their
article, Linda Berger, Linda Edwards, and Terry Pollman suggested — hoped, perhaps, and I along with them — that scholarship relating to
legal analysis, skills and practice is no longer considered inferior to traditional
legal scholarship.6 The growing number of schools where
legal writing faculty have achieved equal status due at least in part to their
legal writing scholarship suggests we have made significant progress as a result of these leaps.7
Given the close relationship between classical rhetoric and modern
legal persuasion, it comes as no surprise that a number of contemporary writers have
written about this relationship for the
legal writing community.162 Two of the writers mentioned in the introduction to this
Article, Michael Frost and Michael Smith, have
written repeatedly
about this relationship and produced treatises with extensive commentary on the uses of classical rhetoric in modern
legal persuasion.163 Both treatises contain chapters on the uses of ethos in modern
legal persuasion, with useful advice for the modern
legal advocate.
My Dean, Bruce Feldthusen, has
written an
article for Canadian Lawyer in response to criticisms in the
legal profession
about legal education and allegations that we are responsible for creating the perceived
articling crisis in Ontario.
Recently,
Legal Technology News featured an
article written by MyCase's founder and VP, Matt Spiegel,
about the importance of reputation...
Learn more
about some of the
legal services I provide to New Jersey and New York businesses, and some of the
articles and online activities I've been involved with or
written.
Would I care most
about their experience as an attorney, experience and results handling similar types of cases, firm's reputation in the
legal community, do they teach other lawyers that area of law, other achievements, perhaps
writing relevant
articles or «the book» in the field of law?
openDemocracy published this
article about how the residence test for
legal aid would have denied justice to some of the most vulnerable in society and, finally, YLAL committee member Heather Thomas wrote for Legal Voice about a day in her life as a legal aid family la
legal aid would have denied justice to some of the most vulnerable in society and, finally, YLAL committee member Heather Thomas
wrote for
Legal Voice about a day in her life as a legal aid family la
Legal Voice
about a day in her life as a
legal aid family la
legal aid family lawyer.
YLAL co-chair Ollie
wrote this
article for The Justice Gap
about the Bach Commission's interim report (also published on HuffPost UK and
Legal Voice), and there was coverage in The Independent, The Guardian and Solicitors Journal.
Seemingly endless numbers of
articles have been
written about the keys to a successful
legal career, each with a twist but many, many commonalities: embrace hard work, find a mentor / sponsor and make yourself useful to him or her, specialize in something strategic and valuable, build strong relationships with your clients, etc..
A journalist called me because I had
written a newspaper
article on a recent happening in a
legal area that I do not practice in — my
article was
about a web based angle to it.
«I've
written about 60 or 70
articles on
legal ethics, so maybe they've endorsed me because they've read my
articles,» he said.
I
wrote here last week
about ModioLegal, a service that partners with
legal publishers to convert news
articles and current - awareness content to audio that subscribers can access through their smart phones or computers.
Is there an
article about legal technology you've been hankering to
write?
Whereas
legal thinkers once limited their most serious scholarship to law review
articles, occasionally nipping out into the dangerous world to
write an op - ed, now many of them offer off - the - cuff observations
about everything from partial birth abortion bans to their favorite CDs, several times daily.
Last year NYU
legal professor Jerome Chen wrote on the East Asia Forum blog an article entitled «The PRC Legal System At Sixty» where he makes no bones about the role of the Communist Party's desire to control the country's legal system, processes and decis
legal professor Jerome Chen
wrote on the East Asia Forum blog an
article entitled «The PRC
Legal System At Sixty» where he makes no bones about the role of the Communist Party's desire to control the country's legal system, processes and decis
Legal System At Sixty» where he makes no bones
about the role of the Communist Party's desire to control the country's
legal system, processes and decis
legal system, processes and decisions:
As a matter of fact, there was even once a law review
article written about reverse - auction sites for
legal services.
A dozen years ago I
wrote an
article about regulating activity on the Internet («Solving
Legal Issues in Electronic Government: Jurisdiction, Regulation, Governance `, (2002), 1 Canadian Journal of Law and Technology No. 3 p. 1) in which I suggested that a number of successful regulatory strategies focused on intermediaries, as the principal targets of regulation might be hard to find or hard to persuade.
Law professors used to «
write illuminatingly
about legal doctrine» in
articles and treatises.
In sum, this Volume provides us with a diverse and engaging range of
articles that challenge us to examine our teaching, our theory, and our assumptions
about legal writing pedagogy and
legal education.
Jim's
article, «Teaching Lawyers to Revise for the Real World: A Role for Reader Protocols,» 7 offered an important contribution, not only because it focused specifically on how judges read and understand briefs, but also because it implicitly nudged us away from teaching platitudes
about good
legal writing and more toward looking at how real readers respond to the principles of
writing that we commonly teach.
In this Volume, the Journal's Editorial Board is pleased to present a wide variety of
articles about the pedagogy of
legal analysis, research, and
writing, as well as a series of
articles flowing from a Symposium on the Carnegie Report's impact on
legal education.
Finally, Laurie Penny
wrote a brilliant
article in the New Statesman calling for everyone who cares
about justice to start fighting back against
legal aid cuts.