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Books > Law > Jurisprudence & general issues > Legal profession > General
The New Lawyer analyzes the profound impact changes in client needs
and demands are having on how law is practised. Most legal clients
are unwilling or unable to pay for protracted litigation and count
on their lawyers to pursue just and expedient resolution. These
clients are transforming the role of lawyers, the nature of client
service, and the principles of legal practice. In this fully
revised edition of the now classic text, Julie Macfarlane outlines
how lawyers can meet new expectations by committing to
lawyer-client collaboration, conflict resolution advocacy, and
revised financial structures so that the legal profession can
remain relevant in this rapidly changing environment.
Intellectual property has always played a key role supporting the
protection and exploitation of technology and brands of businesses
operating in the energy sector. The management of IP is arguably
more important than ever as we transition to more renewable energy
sources and reduced emissions, and see an energy market
increasingly disrupted by start-ups challenging the dominance of
the traditional oil and gas majors. This Special Report looks at
the challenges and opportunities that intellectual property issues
present for different areas of this broad and rapidly changing
sector, including: Upstream: exploration and production of
hydrocarbons across the full lifecycle of oil and gas fields.
Downstream: oil and gas processing technology and resulting
differentiated fuel and lubricant products. Renewables: a look at
the role of IP in supporting renewables businesses, with a
spotlight on a solar start-up. Digitalisation: the transformational
impact of artificial intelligence and machine learning on the
sector as a whole and how IP rights underpin this. Standard
Essential Patents: how patents on wireless interoperability, at one
time solely the domain of the telecoms industry, are increasingly
applicable in the energy sector, and the licensing challenges this
raises. Brand and reputation: how energy businesses seek to protect
and exploit their brands and reputations as well as their
technology, in order to differentiate themselves in an intensely
competitive market. This report is essential reading for legal
advisers and anyone in a commercial role dealing with the energy
sector who is seeking a deeper understanding of the vital role
intellectual property plays in shaping and achieving business
objectives.
There is a widespread and growing acceptance in legal services
organisations worldwide that dealing with stress and burnout is not
just the responsibility of the individual lawyer. The mitigation
and prevention of excessive stress in the legal workplace are now
being recognised as critical management responsibilities. This
expectation has serious measurable implications and consequences
for managing partners, general counsel and other leaders. This
practical guide summons lawyers, leaders and managers to greater
alertness about stress-producing factors in the workplace and to
more effective applications of practical responses and methods in
the special conditions and circumstances of the practice of law in
today's often intense and highly competitive environment. It is
written expressly for professional colleagues who want to work
together in common cause to bring greater awareness to wellness
needs and to minimise excessive stress or distress in the legal
workplace, positively impacting workplace culture, professional
relationships, firm reputation, talent retention and profitability.
Written by a world-recognised counselling psychologist, who has
worked exclusively with the people and organisations in the legal
services industry for more than twenty-five years, it focuses on
actions, not theories and philosophy, that any leader and legal
services organisation can begin to use immediately to make
sustainable investments in the well-being of its people.
This title offers an engaging and comprehensive overview of how
American courts use research and testimony from the social sciences
in reaching their decisions. It is organized around Daubert v.
Merrill Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., the United States Supreme
Court's landmark decision on scientific evidence, and the series of
recent cases beginning with Roper v. Simmons in which the Court
explicitly relied on social science evidence to transform the
process of criminal sentencing. The tenth edition offers a
completely revised and up-to-date treatment of the increasingly
critical role social science research plays in both federal and
state judicial opinions.
In the summer of 2008 Kimberley Motley quit her job as a public
defender in Milwaukee to join a program that helped train lawyers
in war-torn Afghanistan. She was thirty-two at the time, a mother
of three who had never travelled outside the United States. Through
sheer force of personality, ingenuity and perseverance, Kimberley
became the first foreign lawyer to practise in Afghanistan and her
work swiftly morphed into a mission - to bring 'justness' to the
defenceless and voiceless. She has established herself as an expert
on its fledgling criminal justice system, able to pivot between the
country's complex legislation and its religious laws in defence of
her clients. Her radical approach has seen her successfully
represent both Afghans and Westerners, overturning sentences for
men and women who've been subject to often appalling miscarriages
of justice. Inspiring and fascinating in equal measure, Lawless
tells the story of a remarkable woman operating in one of the most
dangerous countries in the world.
The story of the Civil Rights icon and Black lawyer who fought
racism and political oppression with uncommon devotion. There is no
equal justice for Black people today; there never has been. To our
everlasting shame, the quality of justice in America has always
been and is now directly related to the color of one's skin as well
as to the size of one's pocketbook."This quote comes from George W.
Crockett Jr.'s essay, "A Black Judge Speaks" (Judicature, 1970).
The stories of Black lawyers and judges are rarely told. By sharing
Crockett's life of principled courage, "No Equal Justice" breaks
this silence. The book begins by tracing the Crockett family
history from slavery to George's admission into the University of
Michigan Law School. He became one of the most senior Black lawyers
in President Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal administration. Later,
he played a central role fighting discrimination in the United Auto
Workers union. In 1949, he became the only Black lawyer, in a team
of five attorneys, defending the constitutional rights of the
leaders of the U.S. Communist Party in United States v. Dennis, the
longest and most dramatic political trial in American history. At
the close of the case, Crockett and his defense colleagues were
summarily sentenced to prison for zealously representing their
clients. He headed the National Lawyers Guild office in Jackson,
Mississippi, during 1964's Freedom Summer. In 1966, he was elected
to Detroit's Recorder's Court—the court hearing all criminal
cases in the city. For the first time, Detroit had a courtroom
where Black litigants knew they would be treated fairly. In 1969,
the New Bethel Church Incident was Crockett's most famous case. He
held court proceeding in the police station itself, freeing members
of a Black nationalist group who had been illegally arrested. In
1980, he was elected to the United States Congress where he spent a
decade fighting President Reagan's agenda, as well as working to
end Apartheid in South Africa and championing the cause to free
Nelson Mandela. Crockett spent his life fighting racism and
defending the constitutional rights of the oppressed. This book
introduces him to a new generation of readers, historians, and
social justice activists.
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