The Joy of Work, Burned-Out Lawyers & Hard Questions – Redux.
Vacation re-run No. 2, from April 2006–unfortunately this could apply to almost any week: The past week was Pretrial Skirmish, Negotiation and […]
Vacation re-run No. 2, from April 2006–unfortunately this could apply to almost any week: The past week was Pretrial Skirmish, Negotiation and […]
A vacation re-run, from December 2005. Patrick Lamb liked it at the time, so we figure it must have legs: Back to […]
Is there a legal blog which focuses solely on the civil side of American federal trial courts? Practice, procedure, evidence and new […]
From the University of Cincinnati College of Law’s Law Librarian Blog and Robert Ambrogi at Law.com’s Legal Blog Watch, based on 2001-2005 […]
Sounds like a good werewolf movie but this is more interesting and arguably just as gothic. Expat American bloggers now roaming Germany […]
Be sure to tune in to San Diego’s CA$H 1700 AM Saturday from 1:00-2:00 p.m. Pacific time to hear this week’s edition […]
A-list bloggers Carolyn Elefant, Justin Patten and ___ have been inspired by Larry Bodines’s recent post about…
Absolutely everyone–hey, listen up, that means you–should check in with The Greatest American Lawyer from time to time. Always thoughtful, and with […]
Life is short, it’s Saturday, and an English blogger in an e-mail got me thinking. Let’s review. This blog, “What About Clients?”, […]
We’ve posted on this subject before, i.e. here and here, and we’ll keep doing it. If you scroll down the left-hand side […]
Jonathan Stein at his busy and thoughtful blog The Practice offers some fine advice in “Stand up and be heard“. Jonathan and […]
With the arguable exception of France, no part of the world has more in common with America than Britain, or Great Britain. […]
A Little Face Time Maybe? In another month, and for 4 days or so, I’ll be in and around New York City, […]
Robert Ambrogi is an interesting guy. A lawyer and ADR specialist, he is also a polished journalist and wordsmith. Bob writes well, […]
According to the Law Gazette, the London-based legal weekly, The Law Society of England and Wales is considering performing preventive competency checks […]
Today is the first anniversary of “What About Clients?” Thanks to Chicago lawyer Patrick Lamb, D.C. wunderkind consultant Chris Abraham and D.C. […]
Sure about that? Whatever your level of confidence is, don’t miss a post by corporate lawyer Patrick Lamb at his blog In […]
We don’t know anything about the case. We have made no investigation. And we have made no secret of our preference for […]
Jeremy Blachman is out early with Blawg Review #68. His new, much-discussed and apparently funny-as-hell book Anonymous Lawyer makes me happy, and […]
That’s a predatory title for a “how-to” marketing seminar. But while discussing that very course title with an influential blogger/thinker I spoke […]
Is the name of a really swishy bar in my old DC neighborhood but it’s also what we at WAC? would like […]
Is Vietnam the “next Asian miracle”? Asia Business Law has a great post inspired by Dan Harris’s earlier and equally fine piece […]
He’ll be pardoned by Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee for a 1975 reckless driving offense. And Richards is “begging” a Pirates of the […]
WAC? does not, generally speaking, love either American lawyers or the U.S. federal estate (or “death”) tax. Neither institution encourages productivity, is […]
See this particularly insightful and–if you think about it, exciting–Howard Bashman special to Law.com.
David Fischer and his colleagues at Antitrust Review have covered last week’s better posts in Blawg Review #67. There’s a nice balance […]
Fifty-seven million of us, at any rate. From Kevin O’Keefe’s respected site Real Lawyers Have Blogs, here’s “39% of Americans reading blogs” […]
An unusual, interesting and inspiring post by Blawg Review has made me re-think my career, fall in love, get inexplicably hungry. It’s […]
In 1976 Congress passed a barely-noticed housekeeping addition to Title 28, the part of the U.S. Code that deals with federal courts. […]
