Sentences with phrase «legal blogging at»

The other evening I had the pleasure of being on a panel to discuss the nuts and bolts of legal blogging at a continuing legal education seminar at the New York City Bar Association with three of the best bloggers out there: Kevin O'Keefe, Scott Greenfield, and Eric Turkowitz.
Read more about the past, present and future of legal blogging at Blawg Review # 111.

Not exact matches

As a freelance recipe developer and writer, Jeanne has spoken at blogging conferences, covering topics from the legal aspects of blogging to recipe writing and editing.
As a freelance recipe developer and writer, Jeanne has spoken at blogging conferences, covering topics from the legal aspects of blogging to recipe writing and editing.
-LSB-...] Matthews, my colleague at Stem Legal, has announced that nominations are now being accepted for the 2009 Clawbies, which recognize the very best in Canadian law blogging.
skillfully knits together a vast diaspora of legal blogging from last week, from trademark issues to the Miers nomination, to women at work in the law to what you don't know about what you're telling the government.
Steve Matthews and his team at Stem Legal have been working to advance Canadian legal blogLegal have been working to advance Canadian legal bloglegal blogging.
Blogging live from the Legal IT 5.0 Conference in Montreal, I am attending the session on crowdsourcing and the law which started at 9:30 am, frankly, because I was intrigued by the title... Crowdsourcing the law?!
Over at PrawfsBlawg, as they commemorate their tenth anniversary, they've been ruminating on the question of how legal blogging has changed over the past decade.
Other than outliers such as Overlawyered, however, the first wave of legal blogs really started to appear on the scene in late 2001 and 2002, and the recent birthdays marking a decade of blogging at The Volokh Conspiracy and How Appealing are just the beginning of many 10th birthdays that will be coming in 2012.
Yesterday morning, Adrian Lurssen (aka @jdtwitt), Communications Director at legal document sharing website JD Supra, blogged a list of 145 lawyers and legal professionals he's following on Twitter, with the goal of encouraging a some legal community matchmaking.
And as Monica Bay notes at The Common Scold, credit also goes to long - time legal technology innovator Rick Klau, a lawyer who has worked at Google since 2007, helping to enhance its blogging platform and also assisting in this case law project.
He specialises in work on lawyers and legal services, blogging regularly at Lawyer Watch.
I looked at Andrew Sullivan the political blogger, alongside David Allen Green and Adam Wagner, in the context of legal blogging here.
Thanks to Laura Orr at Oregon Legal Research for including this blog in a pair of thoughtful posts on the art and practice of blogging for lawyers: Blogging for Lawyers and Blawgers as (real) blogging for lawyers: Blogging for Lawyers and Blawgers as (real) Blogging for Lawyers and Blawgers as (real) Writers.
Thank you Carolyn — it's terrific to have a blogging colleague of your caliber here at Legal Blog Watch
I spoke to them in advance of their appearance at BlogHer Conference» 05, where Law.com Editorial Director Jennifer Collins will walk them through their legal tips for a consumer blogging audience.
No talk of blawgs at BloggerCon, although several references to the legal issues surrounding blogging.
This week we're saying farewell to Rob Ambrogi at Legal Blog Watch, who won't be blogging there any more.
Blogging today at Legal Blog Watch: «Civil Action» Star Gets SLAPPed Down Blogging Scooter The Urge to Undress and Unmask
Cathy Kirkman reports — here and here — on the weekend's events at BlogHer» 06, the second - annual conference on women and blogging organized by former Legal Blog Watch editor Lisa Stone along with Elisa Camahort and Jory Des Jardins.
Tea's dedication to the profession shines through her work at Law Strategy Group, her production of quality legal programming, and her ongoing publishing, blogging, and podcasting.
We discuss, among other questions, why there aren't more legal bloggers at larger law firms, whether larger firms see value in blogging and whether bloggers by their nature tend not to fit with larger firms.
I believe that some consumers may lack the ability to distinguish between legal services, but at the same time, blogging and the Internet and the «flattening of the world» is fast changing that deficiency.
A little while ago I blogged about legal bibliographies and highlighted some of the work that John Eaton at the University of Manitoba has done in this area.
I've started trying to pry some of the rocks lodged in the legal arena by blogging at ctjester.blogspot.ca.
There seemed to be something going around, as Dennis Kennedy likewise found himself sidelined from live blogging and even my colleague here at Legal Blog Watch, Carolyn Elefant, produced but one post, citing her own suffering from «a bit of a pain.»
The first of Bob's five tips are about starting your own blog: use WordPress (differences between wordpress.com and wordpress.org are discussed); develop your theme (write about what you know, and don't let competition dissuade you); practice before you publish (wait at least a month or two before you announce your blog to the world); develop your voice (recognize that blogging is very different from most legal writing); and remember that it's not about you (examine your motivations for blogging, and remember a conversation goes two ways).
That's the topic of an excellent blog posting by Kelly Anderson of Southern African Legal Information Institute — SAFLII — over at VoxPopuLII, which is a guest - blogging project sponsored by Tom Bruce and our friends across the lake at the Legal Information Institute at the Cornell Law School.
Others among the several blogs honored here are Above the Law as Best New Law Blog, Overlawyered for Best Blawg Theme, Likelihood of Confusion for Best Law Blog Name, Antitrust Review and PHOSITA sharing the award for Best Group Blog, TalkLeft for Best Politicio Blog by Lawyers, Althouse for Best Personal Blog by a legally oriented female blogger, SHLEP: the Self - Help Law ExPress for Best Law Blog in the Public Interest, Online Guide to Mediation for Best Law Blog by a legal mediator, and Denise Howell as Blawg Diva for her blogging at Bag and Baggage, Between Lawyers and Lawgarithms.
For two years now, I have had the honor of sharing blogging duties here at Legal Blog Watch with Washington, D.C., lawyer Carolyn Elefant.
As you may have noticed from my last few short posts here, I've been doing more writing over on Justia's Legal Marketing & Technology Blog this year than in years past and as such I proposed the idea of live blogging sessions at Google I / O this year.
ABlawg organized a roundtable on Blogging and Legal Education at the Canadian Association of Law Teachers conference in May 2015.
I was at the Canadian Association of Law Teachers (CALT) conference in Ottawa earlier this week and participated in a roundtable on blogging and legal education.
Crouch describes the event as «the first comprehensive CLE to look at blogging both as a marketing tool for attorneys and as a legal area.»
In the first of the two, we discussed the case and its broader significance for legal blogging with three guests: Kevin O'Keefe, CEO and publisher of LexBlog; Eric E. Johnson, professor at the University of North Dakota School of Law and author of Blog Law Blog; and Peter Vieth, legal editor for Virginia Lawyers Weekly.
Houston criminal defense attorney Mark Bennett has been at the legal blogging game for more than 10 years.
Which he then does, arriving eventually at the point where he peers into the future of legal blogging.
By: Jennifer Koshan PDF Version: Blogging and Legal Education I was at the Canadian Association of Law Teachers (CALT) conference in Ottawa earlier this week and participated in a roundtable on blogging and legal edBlogging and Legal Education I was at the Canadian Association of Law Teachers (CALT) conference in Ottawa earlier this week and participated in a roundtable on blogging and legal educaLegal Education I was at the Canadian Association of Law Teachers (CALT) conference in Ottawa earlier this week and participated in a roundtable on blogging and legal edblogging and legal educalegal education.
Though there are thousands of legal professionals blogging, Tweeting, and using other forms of social media, most of the companies serving the legal industry who will be exhibiting at LegalTech have little understanding how to leverage social media.
Lawline and LexBlog are hosting a «Legal Blogging and Social Media Workshop» next Wednesday, November 8 from 5 to 6:30 at WeWork Tower 49, 12 East 49th Street, 11th floor.
Rob La Gatta: As someone who looks at the intersection of technology and the law, do you think large law firms and state bars that discourage (or outright prohibit) lawyer blogging are inhibiting potential growth of the legal industry?
I decided to do a bit of research of my own into the world of legal blogging and looked at posts from Am Law 100 firms to sole practitioners, and all in between.
I've come a long way since then, with lots of help from co-workers, managers, and most of all, the fabulous Legal Information to the Public people at Tim Stanley's Justia, who brought us out of the blogging dark ages, with technical, hosting, and moral support.
Our celebration of excellence in law - related blogging and one of our favourite times of the year here at Stem Legal.
Ron Friedmann at Strategic Legal Technology furthers the point about the importance of lead generation for law firms, but he also makes what I think is a key point: the benefits of blogging tend to accrue to the individual author rather than the firm.
Here at Abnormal Use, we enjoy blogging about legal blogging, and Kennerly's post got us thinking about these different types of blogs and how practicing attorneys find the time to engage in blogging to various degrees.
You're trying your hand at something other than legal writing and blogging by submitting to the ABA Journal / Ross Contest for Short Fiction.
(As many baby lawyers don't know, blogging is generally not a great form of marketing, at least compared to focusing on doing good legal work that generates word - of - mouth referrals.)
Ambrogi writes that the Legal Ethics Forum is blogged by John Dzienkowski of the University of Texas Law School, W. Bradley Wendel, associate professor of law at Cornell Law School, and John J. Steele, lecturer in legal ethics at Boalt Hall School of Law, Unversity of California, BerkLegal Ethics Forum is blogged by John Dzienkowski of the University of Texas Law School, W. Bradley Wendel, associate professor of law at Cornell Law School, and John J. Steele, lecturer in legal ethics at Boalt Hall School of Law, Unversity of California, Berklegal ethics at Boalt Hall School of Law, Unversity of California, Berkeley.
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