Written by me and three smart, savvy women I am honored to call my friends — Stephanie West Allen
of Idealawg and Brains on Purpose, Gini Nelson of Engaging Conflicts, and Victoria Pynchon of Settle It Now Negotiation Blog — «The Human Factor» seeks to make ADR relevant to the work of lawyers today.
Bloggers Stephanie West Allen
of Idealawg and Julie Fleming Brown of Life at the Bar are determined to find out, with the help of other law bloggers.
So this year, the two bloggers — Stephanie West Allen
of Idealawg and Julie Fleming - Brown of Life at the Bar — have revived it.
Not exact matches
Over at
Idealawg, Stephanie West Allen plays host to a robust debate over whether Generation Y lawyers — or «millennials,» lawyers under 30 — who seek work / life balance to the exclusion
of focusing on client needs are unrealistic slackers or serious professionals with different priorities than previous generations.
'' Blawg Review # 114 from
idealawg This is the very first Blawg Review
of the summer
of 2007.
Let me preface this by establishing LBW's jurisdiction here: I hereby assert jurisdiction over the «Global Happiness Summit» due to the fact that (a) I saw it on the
idealawg blog, and (b) it may be
of interest to members
of the Happysphere.
PBS reports (via
idealawg) that Nockleby is «trying to construct a third breed
of reporter / attorney hybrid: the journalist with a crash course in the law.»
Stephanie West Allen is keeping track
of the posts at
Idealawg.
This phenomenon
of «extreme» jobs was the subject
of a recent article in the Christian Science Monitor brought to our attention by Stephanie West Allen who publishes the
idealawg.
Stephanie West Allen's
idealawg shows the Benefits
of Contemplative Practice for Lawyers with Talks from The Mindful Lawyer 2010.
The workshop will be conducted by Scott Rogers, M.S., J.D., director
of the Institute for Mindfulness Studies and Stephanie West Allen, J.D., founder
of Brains on Purpose and author
of the syndicated blog,
idealawg.
At
Idealawg, Stephanie Allen West then wrote that aging does not necessarily result in «dimming, dulling, and dawdling,» and that she agrees wholeheartedly with Poll that age does not «necessarily equal incompetence... nor the lack
of creativity.»