Sentences with phrase «on legal blogging»

He is a frequent speaker on legal blogging, and has been quoted in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and the Hartford Courant.
Finally, he shared his thoughts on legal blogging, emphasizing that effective legal blogging is all about conversations with other bloggers, instead of simply trying to game search engines with key words.
Jordan's piece, though not on legal blogging, includes plenty of stories from bloggers who connected with their audience in a meaningful way through authentic blogging.
on Thursday Thinkpiece: Romig on Legal Blogging and the Rhetorical Genre of Public Legal Writing

Not exact matches

There is often excellent blogging in more specialist spaces - academic, scientific, liberties / legal, environmental - which sometimes the political blogs pick up on, but there isn't that much linkage, and there might sometimes be some value in thinking specifically about the linking spaces.
Create a sequence of blog posts on a particular theme or topic with the help of video tutorials (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLP428f69lLpaIqY7RhpPA1XNQgWBk1HOW) Use blogging as a way to write creatively Develop a critical, reflective view of a range of media, including text Ethical and legal responsibilities of being online Pupils are able to screenshot, paste, crop and resize in order to collate evidence NEW - revision on a page sheet (Jan 2017)
All three panelists decry the practice on both ethical and practical grounds, passionately arguing that legal ghost blogging is a material misrepresentation in advertising and damages the attorney - client relationship by undermining the natural trust that a good blog can establish between a lawyer and their readers.
Lis Scott has waited tables, delivered campus mail, driven a truck (more like a van), wordprocessed business and legal documents, written and produced videos, produced B - movie trailers, directed television, designed and developed websites, edited magazine articles, blogged professionally (and amateurishly), served on non-profit boards, co-founded a web development company, raced cars (on actual racetracks — street racing is dumb), and written a handful of stories.
Filed Under: Legal Issues, Self - Publishing Tagged With: blogging, book distribution, book marketing, copyright, eBooks, ISBN, print on demand, Q&A, self publishing
So says University of Pennsylvania law student Alison I. Stein in a thoughtful commentary recently published on SSRN, Women Lawyers Blog for Workplace Equality: Blogging as a Feminist Legal Method.
No doubt that the news, views and updates side of legal information, to which might be added industry gossip and even notes on latest cases and legislation fall into a particular category that might be called journalism and blogging.
After providing a brief history of women in the legal profession, Stein's article analyzes blog entries on topics such as equal pay, institutional discrimination and gender dynamics and then suggests reasons why women lawyers seeking equality might turn to blogging in place of legal channels.
In early December, the Americans celebrated legal blogging with the ABA Journal Web 100, and on December 31st, Canada did likewise with the 2017 Clawbies.
You might also consider adding your voice here: To a February 2006 colloquium on the legal realities behind the blogging revolution, hosted by the Boston University Journal of Science and Technology Law, as posted by Randy Barnett.
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.
Over the next few weeks, I'll be blogging about key data insights from the Legal Trends Report on Slaw, and sharing my personal view on what take - aways the profession can take from the report.
I had just published the first edition of my book, The Essential Guide to the Best (and Worst) Legal Sites on the Web, and saw blogging as a -LSB-...]
Carolyn's remarks in the video focus on the impact blogging has had in the world of solo and small firm practitioners, an area that she says was under the radar of most legal media when she started out.
Brian Leiter first blogged about Simon's article on Nov. 9, calling it The Blockbuster Legal Ethics Article of the Year.
As many of you may know, Matt is a long - term member of the legal blogging community, and prides himself on inspiring innovative thinking.
And second, the host blog puts itself on the radar of the legal blogging community.
I think when you talk to a lot of the next generation legal marketers or even attorneys that are trying to stay on the cusp of what other firms are doing there's this traditional sense that blogging is the way to go.
He specialises in work on lawyers and legal services, blogging regularly at Lawyer Watch.
A well - known speaker and writer on legal technology, Jeff will be covering legal technology (of course), mobile devices, strategic planning and law practice management, Web technologies, as well as privacy and security issues and interesting blogging tips.
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.
This is where the legal blogging community took over the reigns of immediacy and weighed in on the case, in real - time.
Last month, U of Ottawa Law 3L Karolina Fit had a guest Slaw post entitled The Future of Legal Writing: Online and Short Form in which she touched on the various ways professional and public readers of these insights benefit from law blogging.
The elusive and talented Ed of Blawg Review has disseminated an e-mail reminder that you legal blawggers have not one but two opportunities to participate in legal blogging roundups on Monday.
U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner of Boston, who attracted the attention of bloggers and the news media earlier this year when she joined the roster of contributors to the new Slate legal blog, Convictions, shares her thoughts on judicial blogging, judicial speech and courtroom cameras in this week's episode of our legal - affairs podcast Lawyer2Lawyer.
More than a legal guide, the handbook is a how - to for new bloggers, with chapters on setting up blogs, gettting blogs recognized by search engines, and the ethics of blogging.
Also of interest is Robert Ambrogi's comment that legal blogging seems to be on the decline.
«I've discussed blogging in several interviews and I'm always careful to highlight that it keeps me up to date on contemporary legal issues.»
U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner, who attracted the attention of bloggers and the news media earlier this year when she joined the roster of contributors to the new Slate legal blog, Convictions, shares her thoughts on judicial blogging and judicial speech in this week's episode of our legal - affairs podcast Lawyer2Lawyer.
Another legal blogger, Scott Greenfield, wrote on his blog that he has to read Twitter because all his blogging friends use it to comment.
It is interesting for the two vantage points it provides on the latest news and commentary from the legal blogging community.
It offers several real - life examples of the impact blogging has had on the legal profession and on the lawyers who write blogs.
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.
Is there a place in the world of legal publishing for organized or systematic blogging (such as that found on the Courthouse Libraries BC site)?
I had just published the first edition of my book, The Essential Guide to the Best (and Worst) Legal Sites on the Web, and saw blogging as a way to keep myself and my readers up to date.
Ruth was named to the ABA Legal Rebels in 2012, and she has written three best - selling books on guerrilla marketing and social media law, including her latest, The Legal Side of Blogging for Lawyers.
Support for live - blogging courtroom proceedings and discrediting class distinctions drawn in this regard also stems from a promotion of the model of discursive democracy outlined above in Part I. Drawing on the work of theorists including Lon Fuller, recall that the Supreme Court of Canada and legal scholars such as Jeremy Waldron held that the fair functioning of the liberal democratic order required civilian access to information and the attendant opportunity to deliberate upon that information critically.
I'm blogging live from the Ark Conference on Integrating Information and KM Architectures in the Legal Profession where fellow Slawers, Connie Crosby and Joel Alleyne are on the deck to speak.
Sir Henry Brooke blogged about his recent visit to Hackney Law Centre and legal aid for housing law, and Michael Mansfield reflected for Legal Voice on how access to justice has been «denigrated and downgraded&ralegal aid for housing law, and Michael Mansfield reflected for Legal Voice on how access to justice has been «denigrated and downgraded&raLegal Voice on how access to justice has been «denigrated and downgraded».
And this morning, Peter Lattman of the Wall Street Journal Law Blog had the scoop on a «hot off the presses» ruling by federal district court Judge Lewis Kaplan, who found that that prosecutors violated the constitutional rights of a group of former KPMG partners in pressuring the firm not to advance them legal fees (I originally blogged about the matter here in the context of how much we should expect corporations to stand up for customer or employee rights when government comes knocking on the corporate door).
While the law blog may build on — or, perhaps, remediate — aspects of the law review article, legal blogging also emerges out of a tradition of conversation.
The consistent drought of blogging from legal conferences is a reflection on our industry and our slowness to adopt new technologies fully.
Perhaps the most interesting outcome of the Legal Affairs survey of the top 20 legal thinkers in America is its between - the - lines commentary on the power of blogLegal Affairs survey of the top 20 legal thinkers in America is its between - the - lines commentary on the power of bloglegal thinkers in America is its between - the - lines commentary on the power of blogging.
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