‘Teach, Lead, And Transform’: The Future Of The Legal Profession
Joining an emerging trend in legal education, Penn Law launches an innovative and important new initiative.
Joining an emerging trend in legal education, Penn Law launches an innovative and important new initiative.
If it's an echo chamber, it's an awfully big chamber.
With the addition of Uncover’s technology, the litigation software is delivering rapid innovation.
Imagine Y Combinator of the tech world fame, but inside a law firm with open access to the partners, associates, technology infrastructure, and staff.
If this vision gets adopted broadly, this could redefine lawyer prestige, and recast the objectives of Biglaw branding.
An interview with a lawyer turned doctor who knows the ins and outs of the lawyer brain.
What if a machine could actually tell us which firms produce the best legal work product?
Legal teams ask a practical question. If large language models are so capable, why does legal AI still depend on curated content, and why does surfacing that content matter so much?
According to Dattu, by sharing performance information with general counsel, firms are more likely to be paid for their innovations.
Law firms are resisting the adoption of technology or because of the hourly model. Atrium is here to change that.
Could these companies solve the legal innovation paradox?
He thinks that AI, along with document and workflow automation, is going to change the practice of law.
Drawing on more than a decade of data, the report equips law firms and corporate legal teams with actionable insights to better assess risk, refine strategy, and anticipate outcomes in today’s evolving workplace disputes.
Innovative new technology could make courts obsolete in straightforward civil disputes.
Could lawyers -- especially in-house lawyers -- benefit from an MBA made especially for them?
Meet Harvard Law grad Raj Goyle, a high-end lawyer turned legal entrepreneur who never bothered with Biglaw.
Meet Zach Abramowitz, who publishes ReplyAll stories from nearly all legal conferences.
Alternative legal service providers (ALSPs) are transforming the business and practice of law.