Sentences with phrase «pressure upon law»

More likely the commercial production of legal services by such as, LegalZoom, [i] RocketLawyer, and LegalX, will provide a safety valve to relieve the potentially fatal public and political pressure upon law societies that the social media could generate.
Writing 63, 65 (2016)(«[T] he rising costs of legal education and an increasingly competitive legal employment market have put additional pressure upon law schools to do more to prepare their students for legal practice.»)

Not exact matches

Much pressure is put upon this by what the document calls the «problematic features» that «The Act unfortunately retains a feature of recent English Law... acceptance of certain decisions to bring about death», namely intentional killing by «omission», even and especially «of food and water» (p. 19).
10) We end with Goodhart's Law, which states that «any observed statistical regularity will tend to collapse once pressure is placed upon it for control purposes.»
Air temperature is a nonconservative, intensive variable whose local value depends not only upon the radiative fluxes driven by thermalization of insolation, but upon upon the atmoshperic pressure, in accordance with Boyle's law.
I was oblivious, as (I expect) most law students are, to the time pressures that practice would place upon me.
Chair of the Family Law Bar Association, Lucy Theis QC, accused the LSC of putting increasing pressure on the family law system: «It should come as no surprise that the LSC hasn't got the courage publicly to announce this latest assault on legal aid... The expertise of the barristers who practise in this area of the law is relied upon by both the litigants and the judgLaw Bar Association, Lucy Theis QC, accused the LSC of putting increasing pressure on the family law system: «It should come as no surprise that the LSC hasn't got the courage publicly to announce this latest assault on legal aid... The expertise of the barristers who practise in this area of the law is relied upon by both the litigants and the judglaw system: «It should come as no surprise that the LSC hasn't got the courage publicly to announce this latest assault on legal aid... The expertise of the barristers who practise in this area of the law is relied upon by both the litigants and the judglaw is relied upon by both the litigants and the judges.
To the contrary, those about to embark upon that journey confront: (1) the daunting cost of law school; (2) an average of $ 120K debt for attending; (3) a job market where, nationally, close to half of all graduates do not have Bar - required employment nine months after graduation; (4) a widespread market perception that law school graduates — even those from elite schools — lack «practice ready» skills; (5) cut - backs in hiring newly minted lawyers — even among many stalwart law firms; (6) an erosion of mentorship due in part to pressure on senior lawyers to «produce» more (7) the unlikelihood of making (equity) partner; (8) instability of law firms; (9) global competition; (10) technology companies creating products that replace services; and (11) a blizzard of negative press trumpeting the glum prospects for the profession; and (12) alternative career choices — finance, accounting, technology, etc. — that portend greener pastures and do not require the same time and financial commitment to prepare for entry.
These requirements impose the burden of determining continuity of existence of their native title rights and interests upon the applicants at least by inference or extrapolation from various kinds of evidence... If by accident of history and the pressure of colonisation there has been dispersal of a society and an interruption of its observance of traditional law and custom, then the most sincere attempts at the reconstruction of that society and the revival of its law and custom seem to be of no avail.
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