Sentences with phrase «recent area of employment»

Not exact matches

Two areas of the US economy that have been weak are business investment and employment, although recent data have been more positive.
According to the organizations's latest numbers, 70 percent of incoming teachers in the metro LA area, which includes LA Unified and other surrounding districts, identify as non-white; nearly half received federal Pell Grants, which are given to low income students; half are the first in their families to graduate from college, and 10 of the new teachers are recent immigrants who earned federal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals status, which means they are eligible for employment.
This influx of IP litigation talent in the Bay Area closely follows the recent additions of Mark Goodman and Ethan Miller who joined the San Francisco office as partners in the Litigation, Arbitration and Employment practice in early September.
«The frequency of use, and the range of issues on which expert evidence is sought and used in litigation has increased at an enormous rate in recent years - in all areas of law, including employment litigation.
The recent uptick in litigation of all types is driving demand for legal professionals who can represent clients in areas such as complex civil litigation, commercial litigation, insurance defense, class actions, labor and employment, personal injury lawsuits and regulatory actions.
Recent examples of such changes are in the areas of the Employment...
We're helping employers fight the flood of class action litigation filed in recent years, particularly in the areas of wage and hour and equal employment opportunity.
While we have seen indications of improving economic activity in recent months — especially the strengthening of private sector employment — consumers» attitudes improved only marginally, and in some areas not at all, from a year ago, reflecting the continued unevenness and uncertainty of this recovery.»
«Young adults are more likely today to pursue post-secondary education, to relocate to a new area for employment, and to live with partners before marrying, all of which combines to delay the trip down the aisle,» according to a recent blog post at Housing Perspectives, a publication of The Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies.
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