Sentences with phrase «series follows lawyer»

The series follows lawyer Kate Walker as she travels to a sleepy French village to finalize the takeover of a toy company by a multinational conglomerate.

Not exact matches

The series follows a down - and - out lawyer (Thornton) as he seeks redemption.
FOR THE PEOPLE Picked up to series STUDIO: ABC Studios TEAM: Paul William Davies (w, ep), Don Todd (ep), Shonda Rhimes (ep), Betsy Beers (ep), Tom Verica (d) LOGLINE: Set in the Southern District of New York Federal Court, aka «The Mother Court,» legal drama follows brand - new lawyers working on opposite sides — for both the defense and the prosecution — as they handle the most high - profile and high - stakes cases in the country, all as their personal lives intersect.
The show is set one year after the divisive Good Wife series finale, and it follows a young lawyer, Maia Rindell (Rose Leslie), trying to piece her life back together after a financial scam shattered her reputation.
We assembled two lists of 12 people (lawyers in private practice and everyone else) who, based on a series of factors such as Twitter follow ratio, Klout score, and overall impact on the national conversation, seemed to us the most influential users of social media in the Canadian legal community.
We assembled two lists of 12 people (lawyers in private practice and everyone else) who, based on a series of factors such as Twitter follow... more»
In total, the webinar series will include the following focuses and are designed to support lawyers with their Solicitors Regulation Authority «Continuing Competence» training requirements:
If you make it through the initial series of questions but still feel unclear about the lawyer's level of experience, there are several follow - up questions you can ask to find out more.
[The following is the first of a three - part series of columns about Web 2.0 for lawyers originally published almost a year ago in the August, September and October 2006 issues of Law Technology News.
[The following is the second of a three - part series of columns about Web 2.0 for lawyers originally published almost a year ago in the August, September and October 2006 issues of Law Technology News.
[The following is the third of a three - part series of columns about Web 2.0 for lawyers originally published almost a year ago in the August, September and October 2006 issues of Law Technology News.
Behind the scenes, this programmed with a series of questions, there's a logic tree, so depending on what the person's legal problem is, it'll ask a series of questions and those are all vetted with legal aid lawyers, and also ask questions about their income and where they live, which they can answer not, but answering those questions will, at the end of that, I don't know if you followed it out to the end, but it produces a little customized page of, «These are resources you should be looking at.
In Securing Reasonable Caseloads, Lefstein proposes that public defense organizations study their caseloads using Delphi methods, in which an expert panel determines what lawyers should be doing and how much time it should take, using a series of online questions followed by an in - person meeting.
Our lawyers are on the forefront of tackling cutting edge issues facing the industry, as demonstrated by the following series of «firsts» by our team:
[W] e lawyers pride ourselves on our capacity for ingenuity... At some level, we take offence at the idea of project management because it seems to reduce this wonderful profession of ours to little more than a series of steps, a collection of flow charts that anyone could follow... The day of the haphazard lawyer, who pursues a solution by intuition, experience and the loosest possible timetable, is drawing to a close.
Today's blog by our top Vancouver parental alienation lawyers, follows Part 1 in our series on parental alienation.
Following a review of the Labour Relations Code that included 340 written submissions from business, industry, organized labour, non-profits and the general public, as well as technical advice from respected labour lawyer and former Labour Relations Board Chairperson, Andrew Sims, Q.C., a series of proposed changes to the Code are included in Bill 17: The Fair and Family - friendly Workplaces Act.
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