
Cheating Law Student Pissed Essay They Bought Isn’t Up To Snuff
What ever happened to "cheaters never win"?
What ever happened to "cheaters never win"?
Brexit opens some opportunities for lawyers...
Discover five practical ways to harness AI and eliminate busywork—so you can focus more on your clients and less on repetitive tasks.
What could be better than Martin Shkreli at a child’s birthday party?
Figuring out which laws still apply should make for a lot of work for British lawyers, but they might not be getting paid more for their efforts.
Lawyer keeps a stiff upper lip in the face of Brexit.
In-house litigator Mark Herrmann, now living in London, wants to know: why would anyone want to become a solicitor, who doesn't get to speak in court, as opposed to a barrister?
Share your insights in this brief survey.
What one litigator learned from practicing on the other side of the pond.
Greenberg Traurig's CEO has criticized mergers with overseas law firms in the past, but could this particular deal make strategic sense?
Columnist Steve Dykstra explores the benefits to law firms being publicly traded.
How do the U.S., Canada, and the U.K. compare in terms of litigiousness, litigation spending, and types of cases being brought?
The transcript of this benchslap is both hilarious and cringe-worthy.
Litigation finance is gaining acceptance in the U.S., but in the more innovative U.K. market, the practice is "booming."
Is it improper to deliver a closing argument in a criminal trial in the form of a poem?
Can the U.S. look forward to legal services on every corner, provided by every supermarket, for every man, woman, and child?
Who is leaving Edwards Wildman, and what implications might this have for the Locke Lord transaction?