Every story is unique (and extraordinarily well - written, I might add), painting a memorable picture of
the lawyer in a few paragraphs and tying his or her background, personality, interests or experiences into the law they practise and how they deal with the people they represent.
Not exact matches
I had hoped for at least a
few paragraphs discussing how a change
in rules would allow
lawyers to deliver services with greater creativity.
I've witnessed the same scenario
in corporate environments concerning e-discovery that Winkler describes
in the first
few paragraphs such as «information security staff traditionally look at their role
in the e-discoery process as ensuring the integrity of the data...» and «many people are intimidated by their organization's
lawyers — they just want to follow orders and gather the data.»