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Monday, March 31, 2008

Dear Colleagues and Friends,Center for Asia Pacific Women in Politics (CAPWIP) and the United Nations International

Dear Colleagues and Friends,

Greetings from the Center for Asia Pacific Women in Politics (CAPWIP) and the United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Risk Reduction (UN-ISDR)!
 
We are pleased to invite you to the Third Global Congress of Women in Politics and Governance which will be held on October 19-22, 2008 at the Dusit Hotel, Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines.  The theme of the congress is "Gender and Climate Change".

Women and environment experts have raised concern over the absence of women in the discourse and debate on climate change, a global mainstream issue that is currently impacting the entire world. The involvement of women in areas of environmental management and governance should not be perceived as an afterthought. Women's roles are of considerable importance in the promotion of environmental ethics.
The current imperative is for women to understand the phenomenon of climate change and its impacts and implications at the individual, household, community and national levels. Studies show that women have a definite information deficit on climate politics and climate protection. Only with this information can women take their proper, significant and strategic role in the issue of climate change.
Invited to this congress are women parliamentarians, women in decision - making and governance, environment organizations, youth Leaders and Media Practitioners
The Congress will have the following objectives:
Overall Purpose: To provide a forum for women legislators, and women in decision making and environment organizations at all levels, in formulating gender-responsive legislation and policies.


Specific Objectives:
a) To understand the phenomenon of climate change, its impacts and implications;
b). to review and examine the gender aspects of climate change and formulate appropriate actions to address such;
c). to define the roles women can play in addressing the issues of climate change at the global, national and sub-national levels; and
d). to identify and define the action agenda for parliamentarians, policy advocates and women leaders to support global and national actions to adapt to and mitigate the impacts of climate change.
Congress Proceedings:
The discussion on gender and climate change will be organized around identifying the challenges to action as well as defining the appropriate responses to effectively address the impacts of climate change. Inputs to the discussion will be collected and organized around: 1) geographic location and 2) types of actions: i.e. preparedness, risk reduction: building community resilience; adaptation; and mitigation. Cross cutting these discussions will be the identification of technologies in aid of responding to climate change.
The focus of the discussions will revolve around defining and elaborating actions (i.e. preparedness, disaster risk reduction, adaptation, and mitigation) to cope with climate change and its impacts.
Preparedness and disaster risk reduction is about building individual and community capacities to position themselves and their communities so that the likelihood of climate change-induced disasters is reduced; the intensity or adverse impacts of disasters are cushioned and that inhabitants are able to respond promptly, expeditiously and effectively. Adaptation entails actions that moderate harm, or exploit benefits, of climate change.  Mitigation entails actions that minimizes or cushions the adverse impacts of climate change.
In all of these actions, special attention will be given to defining how women and gender could be mainstreamed. In other words, the Congress should define how women can be given the social space to participate, influence, and benefit from global and local responses to climate change.
The registration fee for the four day congress is one hundred eight thousand Philippine Pesos (P108, 000). per person for single room accommodations and Eighty eight thousand Philippine Pesos (P88, 000). per person for twin room sharing accommodations (two persons in one room). We are sending you the detailed information sheet (which contains the registration form) as an attachment to this email.

The training will be held on Oct 19-22, 2008. However, the participants will be requested to be in Manila the day before, October 18, 2008 and leave Manila only on October 23, 2008. The overnight hotel accommodation on October 18, 2008 is already included in the fee. Participants will be billeted in the Dusit Hotel, the venue of the congress and hotels near the Dusit Hotel, accessible within walking distance. Room accommodations in the Dusit Hotel, the venue of the Congress will be on a first come - first served basis.

You can also download the full information sheet and registration form for this Third Global Congress of Women in Politics and Governance from our website, <http://www.capwip.org>

Importance of the Congress

Today, on the average, one person out of nineteen in a developing country will be hit by a climate disaster, compared to 1 out of 1,500 in an OECD country. Climate change creates life time traps: in Niger, a child born during a drought is 72 percent more likely to be stunted than a child born during a normal season.

We hope that your organization can send participants to the Third Global Congress of Women in Politics and Governance. The Theme of "Gender and Climate Change" is the first time this will be discussed in a forum whose objective is to formulate gender responsive legislation and policies for national governments and parliaments.

We truly hope that the environment organizations will find this forum a good opportunity to advocate gender and climate change policies and programs through gender responsive legislation to the women parliamentarians, decision makers, the youth leaders, media and the funding agencies/organizations. Let us join hands in promoting gender responsive governance through transformative leadership and citizenship. We are looking forward to your participation.


Very truly yours,

(signed)
Dr. Jung Sook Kim
President
Center for Asia Pacific Women in Politics (CAPWIP)




Center for Asia Pacific Women in Politics (CAPWIP)
YSTAPHIL Building, 4227-4229 Tomas Claudio Street, Baclaran,
Parañaque City, Metro Manila, Philippines
Tel. (632) 8516934 (632) 8516954; Tele Fax: mobile phone +639184596603
E-mail: globalcongress2008@gmail.com; globalcongress2008@capwip.org <mailto:globalcongress2008@gmail.com; globalcongress2008@capwip.org>; capwip@capwip.org <mailto:capwip@capwip.org> Web: www.capwip.org <http://www.capwip.org>; www.onlinewomeninpolitics.org <http://www.onlinewomeninpolitics.org>

Consulten, opinen y escriban
Saludos
Rodrigo González Fernández
DIPLOMADO EN RSE DE LA ONU
www.Consultajuridicachile.blogspot.com
www.lobbyingchile.blogspot.com
www.el-observatorio-politico.blogspot.com
www.biocombustibles.blogspot.com
Renato Sánchez 3586
teléfono: 5839786
e-mail rogofe47@mi.cl
Santiago-Chile
 
Soliciten nuestros cursos de capacitación en RESPONSABILIDAD SOCIAL EMPRESARIAL – LOBBY – BIOCOMBUSTIBLES    y asesorías a nivel internacional y están disponibles  para OTEC Y OTIC en Chile

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Treasury Dept. Plan Would Give Fed Wide New Power

 

Treasury Dept. Plan Would Give Fed Wide New Power

Published: March 29, 2008

WASHINGTON — The Treasury Department will propose on Monday that Congress give the Federal Reserve broad new authority to oversee financial market stability, in effect allowing it to send SWAT teams into any corner of the industry or any institution that might pose a risk to the overall system.

The proposal is part of a sweeping blueprint to overhaul the nation's hodgepodge of financial regulatory agencies, which many experts say failed to recognize rampant excesses in mortgage lending until after they set off what is now the worst financial calamity in decades.

Democratic lawmakers are all but certain to say the proposal does not go far enough in restricting the kinds of practices that caused the financial crisis. Many of the proposals, like those that would consolidate regulatory agencies, have nothing to do with the turmoil in financial markets. And some of the proposals could actually reduce regulation.

According to a summary provided by the administration, the plan would consolidate an alphabet soup of banking and securities regulators into a powerful trio of overseers responsible for everything from banks and brokerage firms to hedge funds and private equity firms.

While the plan could expose Wall Street investment banks and hedge funds to greater scrutiny, it carefully avoids a call for tighter regulation.

The plan would not rein in practices that have been linked to the housing and mortgage crisis, like packaging risky subprime mortgages into securities carrying the highest ratings.

The plan would give the Fed some authority over Wall Street firms, but only when an investment bank's practices threatened the entire financial system.

And the plan does not recommend tighter rules over the vast and largely unregulated markets for risk sharing and hedging, like credit default swaps, which are supposed to insure lenders against loss but became a speculative instrument themselves and gave many institutions a false sense of security.

Parts of the plan could reduce the power of the Securities and Exchange Commission, which is charged with maintaining orderly stock and bond markets and protecting investors. The plan would merge the S.E.C. with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which regulates exchange-traded futures for oil, grains, currencies and the like.

The blueprint also suggests several areas where the S.E.C. should take a lighter approach to its oversight. Among them are allowing stock exchanges greater leeway to regulate themselves and streamlining the approval of new products, even allowing automatic approval of securities products that are being traded in foreign markets.

The proposal began last year as an effort by Henry M. Paulson Jr., secretary of the Treasury, to make American financial markets more competitive against overseas markets by modernizing a creaky regulatory system.

His goal was to streamline the different and sometimes clashing rules for commercial banks, savings and loans and nonbank mortgage lenders.

"I am not suggesting that more regulation is the answer, or even that more effective regulation can prevent the periods of financial market stress that seem to occur every 5 to 10 years," Mr. Paulson will say in a speech on Monday, according to a draft. "I am suggesting that we should and can have a structure that is designed for the world we live in, one that is more flexible."

Congress would have to approve almost every element of the proposal, and Democratic leaders are already drafting their own bills to impose tougher supervision over Wall Street investment banks, hedge funds and the fast-growing market in derivatives like credit default swaps.

But Mr. Paulson's proposal for the Fed echoes ideas championed by Representative Barney Frank, the Massachusetts Democrat who is chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.

Both see the Fed overseeing risk across the entire financial spectrum, but Mr. Frank is likely to favor a stronger Fed role and to subject investment banks to the same rules that commercial banks now must follow, especially for capital reserves.

The Treasury plan would let Fed officials examine the practices and even the internal bookkeeping of brokerage firms, hedge funds, commodity-trading exchanges and any other institution that might pose a risk to the overall financial system.

That would be a significant expansion of the central bank's regulatory mission.

Consulten, opinen y escriban
Saludos
Rodrigo González Fernández
DIPLOMADO EN RSE DE LA ONU
www.Consultajuridicachile.blogspot.com
www.lobbyingchile.blogspot.com
www.el-observatorio-politico.blogspot.com
www.biocombustibles.blogspot.com
Renato Sánchez 3586
teléfono: 5839786
e-mail rogofe47@mi.cl
Santiago-Chile
 
Soliciten nuestros cursos de capacitación en RESPONSABILIDAD SOCIAL EMPRESARIAL – LOBBY – BIOCOMBUSTIBLES    y asesorías a nivel internacional y están disponibles  para OTEC Y OTIC en Chile

Friday, March 28, 2008

Lawyers as Litigants in Boston


Lawyers as Litigants in Boston

Yesterday brought two appellate opinions from Boston-based courts -- one federal, one state -- in which lawyers participated not as advocates, but as litigants. One, from the state's highest court, the Supreme Judicial Court, addressed the applicability of an anti-SLAPP statute to the lawyer's attempts to recover his legal fees. The other, from the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, involved a divorcing lawyer's attempt to keep his ex-wife from getting a stake in his retirement plans.

The SJC decision, Wenger v. Aceto, involved a case that pit the lawyer, Gregory J. Aceto, against his former client, a physician. When the client's check to Aceto bounced and the client failed to accept delivery of Aceto's formal demand for payment, the lawyer asked a local court to issue a criminal complaint against the client for larceny by check. The request was denied, but it got the attention of the client, who sued his former lawyer for malicious prosecution and abuse of process. The lawyer filed a motion to dismiss based on the state's anti-SLAPP law -- the "strategic litigation against public participation" law that is intended to protect the right to petition the courts. The SJC granted the lawyer's motion to dismiss (although it allowed the client's consumer protection claim to continue). "Although we may dislike or disfavor an attorney's choice to seek a criminal complaint against a former client in an attempt to collect payment for past services," Justice John M. Greaney wrote for the SJC, "we cannot deny any citizen the constitutional right to petition the courts to seek legal redress."

In the case decided by the 1st Circuit, Geiger v. Foley Hoag LLP Retirement Plan, Foley Hoag commercial litigator David R. Geiger went to federal court on the heels of a contentious state court divorce that assigned his ex-wife an interest in his three retirement plans. He filed suit under ERISA seeking to enjoin the plans' administrator from making the transfer to his ex-wife. She intervened and was successful in having the case dismissed. On appeal, the 1st Circuit affirmed the dismissal, concluding that Geiger, who represented himself, failed to protect his pension rights in the state court proceeding, "on the mistaken belief that the federal courts had exclusive jurisdiction."

For lawyers as litigants, that's one win, one loss.

Sphere: Related Content

Posted by Robert J. Ambrogi on March 28, 2008 at 09:27 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

'Neutral' Sites as Fronts for Firms

At the Fortune blog Legal Pad, Roger Parloff points to perhaps the most recent example of what strikes me as an increasingly common and problematic trend -- PI firms setting up seemingly neutral front sites devoted to health, pharmaceutical or other issues they handle. Parloff's example is myMeso, a site about mesothelioma that, he writes, "looks like it's probably run by a nonprofit, 501(c)(3) group devoted to providing dispassionate information about the dreaded, fatal, asbestos-linked cancer." In fact, the site is operated by Alabama plaintiffs' firm Beasley Allen Crow Methvin Portis & Miles and written by employees of the firm. Parloff had to "scroll down a ways" before he found a faint, watermark-like box indicating the site was a "public awareness web site sponsored by Beasley Allen."

Since Parloff's post, the firm has modified the page so that its sponsorship is prominently identified. But this is only one example of many. Pick a disease, add dot-com, and you're likely to find yourself at a site portrayed as a victims' or consumers' resource but run by a law firm. Some are transparent, some are not. There is Mesothelioma.com, Asbestos.com and plenty of others. A variation on this theme are lawyer referral sites such as the Top Lawyers sites I wrote about here in October ('TopLawyers' Floods YouTube, Web).

A Beasley Allen partner tells Parloff he does not consider the site confusing to consumers. Ethics specialists say the site may be OK under ethics rules because it does not directly solicit clients -- and may even be protected by the First Amendment. Notably, Parloff writes, several legal-ethics experts initially saw no problem with the site, "since none realized that the site was run by a law firm until I told them."

I am all for law firms disseminating useful information to consumers. But they should be up-front about it. If a firm sets up a set to provide information, it should lay claim to it, not lay silent behind a hidden wall.

Sphere: Related Content

Posted by Robert J. Ambrogi on March 28, 2008 at 09:12 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

USPTO Chief Slams Bad Patents

Dudas No less an innovator than IBM once filed a patent on a system for providing restroom reservations. Or, as Ars Technica more crassly describes it, "Big Blue wanted a patent on taking a number to use the can." According to the post, Jon Dudas, the director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, in a speech yesterday at the Tech Policy Summit in Hollywood, cited that example as symptomatic of the problems facing his office.

While companies generally want patents in order to protect intellectual property, that's not the only a reason for seeking patents. Dudas noted that Wall Street loves it when companies file patents, since patent numbers can be used as an easy proxy for innovation and R&D work. The sheer number of patents can also make it easier to strike cross-licensing agreements with other companies, as it makes a given patent portfolio look broader and stronger.

While no one would argue that bad patents "promote innovation," they do often make business sense, Dudas told the summit's attendees. That is why the number of bad applications is surging and the percentage of patent approvals is dropping dramatically. But how should the surge be slowed? One proposal being floated is to raise the filing fee significantly, but Dudas believes this would be counter to the USPTO's mission to be open to all inventors. He has other ideas for stemming the surge:

Dudas wants to see the barrier to filing raised in less costly ways, such as requiring minimal searching for similar or identical previous patents, and he wants applicants to describe exactly how their invention expands the state of the art; in other words, make a strong argument that your idea is demonstrably better than what's already out there. These changes alone will 'drop out a significant portion of bad applications.'

Lurking in the background is the controversial patent reform bill still making its way through Congress. Will it pass? Dudas told his summit audience that he gives the bill a better than 50 percent chance of success during this session of Congress. Meanwhile, if you need to use the restroom while you're waiting, e-mail IBM for a number.

Sphere: Related Content

Posted by Robert J. Ambrogi on March 28, 2008 at 09:03 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Martin Takes Helm of Bingham in Boston

Martin Both The Boston Globe and Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly have the news that Ralph C. Martin II has been named managing partner of the 270-lawyer Boston office of Bingham McCutchen, putting to rest speculation that the former Boston district attorney would run for mayor of that city in 2010. Both reports also say that Martin is the first black managing partner at a large Boston law firm. "I've been joking with Ralph that I see his new job as mayor of the firm's Boston office," Bingham Chairman Jay S. Zimmerman told the Globe. "What that means is he's charged with listening to people, understanding their needs and concerns, and making sure our Boston office remains a vibrant internal community."

Martin, 55, was district attorney of Suffolk County, where Boston is located, from 1992 to 2002 -- elected to that office as a Republican. He'd been exploring a mayoral run for several months. In addition to running the Boston office, he will continue to practice law and to serve as managing principal of the firm's government relations offshoot, Bingham Consulting Group.

Sphere: Related Content

Posted by Robert J. Ambrogi on March 28, 2008 at 08:57 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

God's Lawyer Pens Legal Help Book

Slbcroppedsmallerversion When a legal self-help book is promoted as coming from God's legal department, you can't ask for a higher authority. That's the pitch for the new book from "Christian lawyer" Stephen L. Bloom, The Believer's Guide to Legal Issues, due out April 1. "I've seen people, including Christian believers, getting caught up in very painful legal nightmares, damaging their relationships, making themselves miserable, all by following traditional secular legal advice and values," Bloom says. "So I've written this book to empower people to rise above the mindset of greed and revenge so prevalent in the law, to draw them instead to God's vision of lasting peace, restored relationships and true justice."

A partner at the firm of Irwin & McKnight in Carlisle, Penn., Bloom is an adjunct professor of business at Messiah College, a legal columnist for Good News Daily and the former host of a radio program, "Practical Counsel -- Christian Perspective." According to his personal Web site, he regularly speaks at churches, colleges and professional schools, and elsewhere, offering advice on how audiences can "integrate Biblical Christian values and perspectives into their real-life decisions." His new book, according to information on this site, addresses common legal issues such as real estate, wills and trusts, bankruptcy, divorce, litigation and business. His goal, he says, is to discuss these issues from a Biblical perspective:

By presenting the unique and practical Christian perspective of a lawyer informed by God's rich array of relevant scriptural wisdom and tempered by two decades of representing and counseling real life clients on the very same kinds of legal situations its readers now face, this book will release multitudes of Christian believers from the tangled web of moral confusion and ethical compromise so often promoted and exacerbated by lawyers and the legal establishment.

Among readers' reviews of the book at Christianbook.com, there are the good words any writer might pray for. One reviewer calls it "a page turner -- easy to read and yet powerful in applying Scripture to real life situations." No word, however, on feedback from the legal department's Chief Legal Officer.

Sphere: Related Content

Posted by Robert J. Ambrogi on March 28, 2008 at 06:53 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)


Consulten, opinen y escriban
Saludos
Rodrigo González Fernández
DIPLOMADO EN RSE DE LA ONU
www.Consultajuridicachile.blogspot.com
www.lobbyingchile.blogspot.com
www.el-observatorio-politico.blogspot.com
www.biocombustibles.blogspot.com
Renato Sánchez 3586
teléfono: 5839786
e-mail rogofe47@mi.cl
Santiago-Chile
 
Soliciten nuestros cursos de capacitación en RESPONSABILIDAD SOCIAL EMPRESARIAL – LOBBY – BIOCOMBUSTIBLES    y asesorías a nivel internacional y están disponibles  para OTEC Y OTIC en Chile

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Law.com Blog Network

Para que los abogados que viajan a los USA por razones profesionales conozcan más del los colegas  en los EEUU

Law.com Blog Network

Blog List Blog List

Adam Smith, Esq.

Bruce MacEwen

Bruce MacEwen
Bruce MacEwen is a lawyer and consultant to law firms on strategic and economic issues. During his career, Bruce has been CEO of a dot-com; practiced securities law in-house for nearly 10 years at Morgan Stanley/Dean Witter; and was an associate with Shea & Gould and with Breed, Abbott & Morgan in New York. Bruce has written for or been quoted in: Fortune; The Wall Street Journal; The New York Times; Bloomberg News; Business 2.0; The National Law Journal; Law Firm, Inc. and Law Technology News, and frequently appears as a speaker or panelist at legal industry conferences nationally and internationally. He received his BA magna cum laude in economics from Princeton University, his JD from the Stanford Law School and is an MBA candidate in finance at NYU's Stern School of Business. A native New Yorker, he lives on Manhattan's Upper West Side with his wife and dog.

ALM Research Blog

Charles J. Lowry

Charles J. Lowry
Charles J. Lowry is Director of Client Relations for ALM Research, a division of ALM Law and Business. He is responsible for presenting to law firm and vendors to the legal profession the marketing, business development and competitive intelligence tools available through ALM Research.

Prior to coming to ALM Research, Lowry held a variety of editorial and sales/marketing positions at Matthew Bender, Lexis and Kluwer Law International. He holds a B.A. degree in philosophy and a Ph.D. in classics. He lives in Brooklyn, New York and works from the New York City office of ALM. More Info…

Blawg Review

Anonymus
Blawg Review is the blog carnival for everyone interested in law; a traveling post including links and commentary on the best recent law blog articles, hosted by a different blogger every week. Blawg Review is the collaboration of a worldwide community of lawyers, law students and law professors; a law blog project administered by an anonymous Editor.

BLT

BLT
We cover law, lobbying, politics, crime, courts, business and culture in the nation's capital and beyond.

The Common Scold

Monica Bay

Monica Bay
Monica Bay is editor-in-chief of Law Technology News, and has been with ALM since 1985. A member of the California bar, she spent 13 years based in San Francisco, where she was senior editor at The Recorder and Counsel Connect (Law.com's predecessor). She helped the "Late Show with David Letterman" set up its first Web site on AOL before moving to New York City in 1998 to oversee LTN. She writes about legal technology, "green law," law firm management and culture, and has been known to pay a little bit of attention on her blog to the New York Yankees.

Counsel to Counsel

Stephen Seckler

Stephen Seckler
Stephen Seckler is managing director of the Boston office of BCG Attorney Search, the largest search firm in the United States dedicated to law firm placement. For more than 10 years, he has counseled partners and associates who want help exploring their career options. Previously, after graduating from Northeastern University School of Law, he was a program attorney for eight years for Massachusetts Continuing Legal Education, where he developed hundreds of programs for one of the top CLE providers in the country. He subsequently launched Seckler Legal Consulting, where he recruited talent for law firms and corporations and coached lawyers on career and marketing issues. During this time, he published an electronic newsletter, Seckler's Legal Digest, with links to career and marketing resources. He also facilitated a monthly roundtable for the Career Services Committee of the New England Corporate Counsel Association and served on the Steering Committee of the Solo and Small Firm Practice Section of the Boston Bar Association. He created Counsel to Counsel to provide a forum for lawyers who want to increase their overall career satisfaction. He also authors a column, "Career Consult," for Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly and sits on the Boston Bar Association's Standing Committee on Work/Life Balance. Steve is qualified to administer the Myers Briggs Type Indicator (he is an ENFP) and is interested in law office technology, management and entrepreneurship.

Crime & Federalism

Michael Cernovich
Norm Pattis

Michael CernovichNorm Pattis
Michael Cernovich graduated from law school at Pepperdine University in December 2004. He has a B.A. in Legal Studies with a Philosophy Minor. After passing the bar, he would like to open his own law firm or work for the Federal Defenders or Los Angeles County Public Defender's Office.


Norman A. Pattis is a Connecticut criminal defense lawyer and civil rights attorney. He has won multi-million dollar verdicts in police misconduct and employment cases, and has represented persons accused of crimes ranging from contract murder, sexual assault and bank robbery to white collar offenses involving embezzlement by public officials. His practice focuses equally on the state and federal courts. Pattis has argued in the Connecticut Appellate and Supreme Courts, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second and Sixth Circuits, and has appeared before the United States Supreme Court in prisoner's rights litigation. He consults with lawyers across the country on cases arising under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983. In addition, he owns the Whitlock Farms Booksellers, in Bethany, Connecticut, a used and rare bookstore that has been operating out of two barns since 1948. For the past eight years, he has written a weekly column about the law and legal affairs for The Connecticut Law Tribune. His first attempt at fiction, Dark Justice, was published in serial form in the Law Tribune.

EDD Update

EDD Update
The EDD Update Blog is a collaborative blog with over 18 attorneys, consultants and editors. Blog authors represent some of the electronic discovery industry's best practitioners and analysts. Many of the authors are also on the editorial boards of both Law Technology News and Law.com's Legal Technology section. The blog will cover law, technology, analysis, news and events in EDD. A separate page of the blog will detail the biographies of the writers that include: editors Monica Bay, Claire Duffet and Sean Doherty; practitioners Robert Ambrogi, George Rudoy (Sherman & Sterling), Matt Kesner (Fenwich & West), David Bowerman (Preston Gates & Ellis); and consultants Craig Ball, Michael Arkfeld, Tom Gelbman, Tom O'Connor, and George Socha.

The Estrin Report

Chere Estrin

Chere Estrin
Chere Estrin, Ph.D., CEO of Estrin LegalEd, a continuing legal education organization, produces the popular paralegal blog, The Estrin Report. Ms. Estrin has written eight books in the legal field and is the founder of The Paralegal SuperConferences. She is an Inc. magazine Entrepreneur of the Year finalist, recipient of the Los Angeles/Century City Chamber of Commerce Women of Achievement award, and is a co-founding member of the International Paralegal Management Association. A lively and much sought-after national seminar leader, Chere's speaking engagements frequently sell out early.

FutureLawyer

Rick Georges

Rick Georges
Rick Georges is a solo practitioner, practicing in St. Petersburg, Florida. He is active in the St. Petersburg, Florida, and American Bar Associations, and presents seminars and programs on the use of computers in the practice of law. He has authored the "FutureLawyer" column for the Tampa Bay Review and other publications, and has taught law office management and computer-assisted legal research at the College and Law School level.

How Appealing

Howard Bashman

Howard Bashman
Howard J. Bashman, a nationally recognized attorney, operates his own appellate litigation boutique in Willow Grove, Pa., a suburb of Philadelphia. Howard appears regularly before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and Pennsylvania's state appellate courts. In 2003, American Lawyer Media named Bashman one of Pennsylvania's top 40 lawyers under age 40 on the strength of his appellate litigation practice…more

Human Law

Justin Patten

Justin Patten
Justin Patten is a British solicitor, mediator and trainer. As a qualified solicitor, he has also acted for clients on a wide range of disputes and is familiar with the legal process. Over the last 18 months he has elected to specialize in mediation, providing a full mediation service to businesses and via law firms, as well as providing practical mediation training. His blog covers the issues of mediation and alternative ways of resolving disputes.

Inhouse Blog - News for InHouse Counsel

Geoffrey G. Gussis

Geoffrey G. Gussis
Geoffrey G. Gussis created Inhouse Blog - News for InHouse Counsel to collect news and job postings relevant to in-house counsel. A former general counsel of an advertising and marketing services provider, Geoff is an attorney with Riker, Danzig, Scherer, Hyland & Perretti, LLP, in Morristown, N.J., where his practice focuses on corporate and technology transactions. He received his B.A., magna cum laude, from the University of Pennsylvania in 1995, and went on to receive his J.D. from Washington University School of Law in St. Louis in 1998, where he was an associate editor of the law review.

Insurance Scrawl

Marc Mayerson

Marc Mayerson
Marc Mayerson is a partner Spriggs & Hollingsworth, a litigation firm in Washington, D.C. In his practice, he is often involved in insurance disputes that include a broad range of insurance policies (CGL, property, D&O, ERISA, fidelity, business interruption/extra expense, and others) and many types of losses, including some rather exotic ones, such as genetically modified foods and complex financial frauds. Mayerson also teaches the insurance law class at George Washington University's law school. He received his undergraduate degree from the University of Michigan and graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School, where he was a member of the Harvard Law Review.

I/P Updates

William F. ("Bill") Heinze

Bill Heinze
Bill Heinze, the author of I/P Updates, is a former Investigative Attorney for the U.S. International Trade Commission. Mr. Heinze is an alumnus of the University of Texas (B.S.M.E., M.B.A.) and George Washington University Law School. He is currnyl in-house with one of the world's leading suppliers of power generation and energy delivery technologies.

JD Bliss

Joshua Fruchter

Joshua Fruchter
The publisher of JD Bliss is Joshua Fruchter, a graduate of New York University School of Law and an attorney admitted in New York. Joshua practiced bankruptcy law at Kaye Scholer from 1993 to 1999 before embarking on an Internet marketing career. In 2002, Joshua founded eLawMarketing, which now provides online marketing services to over 80 law firms and law-related organizations in the United States and abroad. Joshua lectures and writes regularly on Internet marketing for law firms, and currently sits on the editorial board of Marketing the Law Firm, a newsletter published by ALM Media. In September 2004, Joshua founded JD Bliss as a blog and email newsletter service to help attorneys achieve greater work life balance, career satisfaction and personal growth, and to assist law firms with attorney retention efforts.

Jottings by an Employer's Lawyer

Michael Fox

Micahel Fox
Michael Fox, who specializes in labor and employment law, is a litigator with Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C. He is a graduate of the University of Texas School of Law…more

LA Legal Pad

LA Legal Pad
The National Law Journal's LA Legal Pad is a new daily blog for the Los Angeles area that covers law firm news and local legal developments. We are interested in hearing from lawyers and law firms in the Los Angeles and surrounding communities about who's moving where and why, who's getting the business and who's not, who's won and who's lost, and what's going on in the courts. Please contact blog editor Elizabeth Amon at eamon@alm.com with your stories, tips and suggestions.

Law Department Management

Rees Morrison

Rees Morrison
Rees Morrison CMC has been consulting with law departments for 17 years to help them manage themselves and their outside counsel. A former practicing lawyer, author of six books, a Senior Director of Hildebrandt International based in Somerset, NJ, Rees welcomes your comments.

LawMarketing Blog

Larry Bodine

Larry Bodine
Larry Bodine is a strategic marketing consultant who helps law firms generate revenue and get new business by developing business development strategies, coaching lawyers to develop their personal marketing plans, and using technology to market the firm. He practiced law in Madison, Wisconsin and is a cum laude graduate of both Seton Hall University (J.D., 1981) and Amherst College (B.A., 1972).

Leadership for Lawyers

Mark Beese

Mark Beese
Mark Beese's blog Leadership for Lawyers focuses on issues of leadership, management, and marketing for law firms. Mark is known as the "Marketing Guy" at Holland & Hart, a 350 attorney law firm with 13 offices in seven states across the Rocky Mountain West and Washington, D.C. Mark is a frequent speaker on topics of law firm leadership and marketing. He holds an MBA in Marketing and is the former president of the Legal Marketing Association in Colorado and an alumnus of Leadership Denver and Leadership Buffalo.

Legal Blog Watch

Carolyn Elefant

Robert Ambrogi

Carolyn Elefant Robert Ambrogi
Carolyn Elefant tracks and analyzes the postings of Law.com bloggers and others for Legal Blog Watch. She is also the writer of My Shingle, a blog to give solos and small firms a comprehensive online guide for starting and running a firm, and trading advice and accomplishments. In doing so, Ms. Elefant occasionally offers up tales of her own private practice, a blend of energy regulatory work, renewable project development and permitting, litigation and appellate practice.

Robert Ambrogi is a lawyer, writer and media consultant, and he tracks new and intriguing Web sites of interest to the legal profession through his blog LawSites. A longtime legal journalist, Bob has been editor of the National Law Journal, director of the ALM News Service, publisher of The Connecticut Law Tribune, editor of Lawyers Weekly USA and editor of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly. More recently, he was vice president of the legal consulting firm Jaffe Associates. He writes the Web Watch column for Law Technology News and is author of the book, The Best (and Worst) Legal Sites on the Web.

Legal Pad

Legal Pad
Legal Pad is the blog of The Recorder and Cal Law, a daily newspaper and Web site covering the legal industry in California. They are the pre-eminent publications for the California legal community, with a daily e-mail alert for the latest legal news, plus another for case decisions from all California appellate courts, as well as award-winning news coverage and insightful commentary. When its reporters and editors are not producing all that, they drop by Legal Pad to blog about the stuff that might otherwise fall through the cracks.

Legal Sanity

Arnie Herz

Arnie Herz
Legal sanity is a blog offering insights, observations and news on building successful business relationships in the law. A graduate of the University of Michigan (BA 1984) and Fordham Law School (JD 1991), Arnie began his career as a big firm litigator and then moved on to a successful Wall Street partnership. In 2000, he started his own firm and now handles a range of matters for a diverse group of clients in addition to serving as a mediator. In 2004, Arnie launched a training and development business through which he presents programs and keynotes to lawyers and other service professionals on optimizing work relationships without depletion and self-sacrifice. His approach to client relationships and counseling has been featured in a number of distinguished publications, including the Harvard Negotiation Law Review, the ABA Journal and The New York Law Journal.

Legal Technology Blog

Michael Cernovich
The Legal Technology Blog will be a collaborative effort between the Law.com's Legal Technology Editor and Associate Editor, members of the Board including Ari Kaplan, and freelance writers Brett Burney and C.C. Holland.

May It Please The Court

J. Craig Williams

Craig Williams
J. Craig Williams writes daily observations on law and legal news for May it Please the Court. Before founding the WLF | The Williams Law Firm and beginning his career as a business litigator, Mr. Williams was a broadcaster and a journalist. He obtained his law degree, with distinction, from the University of Iowa College of Law… more

My Shingle

Carolyn Elefant

Carolyn Elefant
Carolyn Elefant's blog gives solos and small firms a comprehensive guide for starting and running a firm, and trading advice and accomplishments. In doing so, Ms. Elefant occasionally offers up tales of her own private practice, a blend of energy regulatory work, renewable project development and permitting, litigation and appellate practice.

Robert Ambrogi's LawSites

Robert Ambrogi

Robert Ambrogi
Robert Ambrogi is a lawyer, writer and media consultant, and he tracks new and intriguing Web sites of interest to the legal profession through his blog LawSites. A longtime legal journalist, Bob has been editor of the National Law Journal, director of the ALM News Service, publisher of The Connecticut Law Tribune, editor of Lawyers Weekly USA and editor of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly. More recently, he was vice president of the legal consulting firm Jaffe Associates. He writes the Web Watch column for Law Technology News and is author of the book, The Best (and Worst) Legal Sites on the Web.

Silicon Valley Media Law Blog

Cathy Kirkman

Cathy Kirkman
Cathy Kirkman writes about media and technology law from a Silicon Valley perspective for her Silicon Valley Media Law Blog. She is an equity partner at legal powerhouse Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati in Palo Alto, where her practice focuses on media law, licensing and e-commerce. Before that, she practiced in the entertainment department of Loeb and Loeb in Los Angeles. A native of Palo Alto, she graduated Order of the Coif from Stanford Law School and Phi Beta Kappa from Harvard University. She has advised clients such as Google, Napster, Creative Commons, Lucasfilm, Pixar, Bad Boy, and numerous start-ups and venture capitalists on intellectual property matters.

Tex Parte

Tex Parte
Tex Parte is a daily blog from the award-winning editors and reporters of Texas Lawyer. It provides inside information on law firms, courts, in-house counsel and legal developments from across the state that readers won't find anywhere else. Contact editor in chief Colleen McGushin at cmcgushin@alm.com with stories, tips and suggestions.

Wired GC

John Wallbillich

John Wallbillich
John Wallbillich writes about the role of the general counsel and corporate law from the inside out at Wired GC. John was general counsel for an energy company in the Midwest for over 12 years and a corporate lawyer (in-house and in private practice) before that. In late 2006, John launched Lexvista Partners, an Ann Arbor, Mich.-based legal advisory and development firm.
 
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Howrey Offers Suits, Harbottle Offers Sex

from legal watch blog:

Howrey Offers Suits, Harbottle Offers Sex

Above the Law's David Lat reports that Howrey may be filming some type of video of its firm.  Lat's informant notes that the Howrey set included "multiracial attorneys in suits everywhere." Meanwhile Ben Moshinsky at The Lawyer.com reports that a London-based firm,

Harbottle and Lewis is taking a different marketing approach.  From Moshinsky's post:

One of Lawyer2B.com's switched-on news seekers obtained an email sent to a broadsheet by the firm's PR agency complete with a picture of Harbottles' strapping trainees to try to drum up some interest in the firm.  The said PR person apparently wanted to sell a story about the wonderful working conditions at Harbottles, using a healthy sprinkling of sex to spice up the offering.  "This item might make an excellent picture story to cheer up credit crunch-induced depression," went the pitch. "I think seeing a beautiful woman on the front page of the FT might well do wonders for the economy!"

Moshinsky wonders what's next -- maybe some grainy 8mm video footage?

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Posted by Carolyn Elefant on March 25, 2008

Consulten, opinen y escriban
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Supreme Court Sides With Texas in Dispute With Bush

Supreme Court Sides With Texas in Dispute With Bush

Legal Times
March 26, 2008

In a landmark decision at the intersection of state, federal and international law, the Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled that neither the World Court nor President George W. Bush can mess with Texas when it comes to that state's enforcement of its own criminal laws. The justices ruled that neither the international court nor a directive by the president, both aimed at enforcing a consular rights treaty signed by the United States, amounted to "enforceable federal law" that could be imposed on Texas.

Former Top Lawyer Faces Life in Jail for Phony Deal

Corporate Counsel
March 26, 2008

Robert Graham, former associate GC at General Re Corp., could spend the rest of his life in jail. On Feb. 25 a federal jury convicted Graham and four other defendants for aiding a sham deal at American International Group. Graham's conviction is further proof that in-house lawyers can't do something that they suspect may be wrong just to please company executives, says one former federal prosecutor, who notes that being an in-house counsel is not a "9-to-5, rubber-stamp, do-what-I'm-told kind of job."

Defendant Dodges an EDD Bullet

New York Law Journal
March 26, 2008

While courts are becoming more familiar with the legal and technical issues arising from electronic discovery, there is still no shortage of perplexing "e-issues" confronting judges. In Toussie v. County of Suffolk in the Eastern District of New York, a defendant dodged substantive sanctions for losing and/or destroying e-mails requested in discovery because the parties requesting the e-mails failed to marshal satisfactory evidence that the missing e-mails would have been supportive of their case.

 
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huck Newton: The Ego Is Big

huck Newton: The Ego Is Big

Link: Chuck Newton: The Ego Is Big. Sololawyergraphic_2 I love this post by my friend, Chuck Newton. He talks about lawyers who won't move their practice to their homes as having low opinions of lawyers who do. You know, the lawyers who have big offices, big overhead, big heads, and think of themselves as better than the run of the mill solo practitioner. He also talks about the lawyer who moved his practice home so he could care for his kids after his wife died, and stayed home after they grew up. I happen to think practicing at home (at least all or part of the time, as I do) is the selfish choice. It is in my self interest to be home when the kids are home. It is in my self interest to keep the overhead low, by not having a passel of employees with their hands out for salary and benefits. It is in my self interest to practice from a former house that is paid for, so that I have no rent. Maybe we solo lawyers know something the biglaw types don't?

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Consulten, opinen y escriban
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Rodrigo González Fernández
DIPLOMADO EN RSE DE LA ONU
www.Consultajuridicachile.blogspot.com
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www.biocombustibles.blogspot.com
Renato Sánchez 3586
teléfono: 5839786
e-mail rogofe47@mi.cl
Santiago-Chile
 
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What's the Deal with GAO/Thomson Deal?

from legal  watch blog

What's the Deal with GAO/Thomson Deal?

Questions continue to be raised among bloggers about an agreement in which the U.S. General Accounting Office gives publisher Thomson West exclusive rights to federal legislative histories prepared on the public's dime. Public-access proponent Carl Malamud (who we've written about here and here) was quoted March 17 on the blog Boing Boing explaining that he has been investigating the arrangement with help from the Electronic Frontier Foundation:

The law librarians at GAO have compiled complete federal legislative histories from 1915 on. These are the definitive dossiers that track a bill through the hearing process and into law. If you want to divine the intent of Congress, this is where you go.

GAO cut a contract with Thomson West to have these documents scanned. Thomson West claims they have exclusive access to these public documents and even go so far as to boast that you should purchase this exclusive 'product' from West because the GAO law librarians (public employees!) have done all the work for you!

Malamud set up a Scribd page that contains the documents he has obtained from the GAO pertaining to this agreement. This weekend, the blog Free Government Information went through the documents in some detail and posted some interesting facts. The documents show that the GAO has compiled 20,597 legislative histories covering most public laws from 1915 to 1995 and spanning the 64th to the 104th Congresses -- almost all in paper or microfiche. In recent years, the GAO sought ways to digitize these histories, to preserve their integrity and improve their searchability. It tried to do some of this in-house, then went looking for a partner, which it found in Thomson West.

These documents raise the question: Why would the GAO enter into a relationship giving a private commercial entity exclusive rights to this valuable public resource? "Wholesale privatization without a careful, public examination of other, more citizen-friendly, alternatives is not acceptable," Free Government Information asserts, while Simon Fodden at Slaw.ca says that even if Malamud is being alarmist, the situation presents "a cautionary tale for any government agency that wants to leverage its records with the help of private enterprise." As far as I can tell, no one from either the GAO or Thomson West has responded to the concerns raised by these bloggers and others. Here is their chance. If someone from either entity wants to shed light on the arrangement, we are all ears.

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Posted by Robert J. Ambrogi on March 24, 2008

Consulten, opinen y escriban
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Saturday, March 22, 2008

FROM ADAM SMITH , ESQ

Links: law
Links: corporate law
Business Pundit
CorporateCounsel.Net Blog
Conglomerate

links: economics
Atlantic Blog
Business Pundit
Chicago Boyz
Ensight
Marginal Revolution
Ronald Coase Institute
Links: tech & culture
Andrew Sullivan
Dynamist
Brad Delong
Freedom to Tinker
Steven Johnson

"Adam Smith, Esq.,"® an inquiry into the economics of law firms, and the maroon banner, are a federally registered trademark belonging to Adam Smith, Esq., LLC, which is partially owned and controlled by Bruce MacEwen.

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Hard Economics & Associate Lockstep

Hard Economics & Associate Lockstep

No question is posed to me more frequently these days than, "What does this economic environment mean for law firms?"

To which the only sensible answer is, "It's way too soon to predict anything for sure, but each firm's own situation is sure to differ."    Indeed, it's true that we've seen layoffs at Cadwalader, Clifford Chance, Thacher Profitt, and as of yesterday Thelen Reid, as noted on the WSJ Law Blog.  Yet I've also had conversations with managing partners who tell me that the first quarter of 2008 is shaping up to be as strong as any last year.  So what's going on?

I've written about this environment before, and recently, as in:

If I had to summarize where I stand, I'll reiterate that at this stage in the cycle I remain a "worried optimist."

But since loudly and confidently declaring one's economic predictions is essentially a mug's game (as the joke has it, "you could lay all the economists in the world end to end and they wouldn't reach a conclusion"), the real question is, What should you do?

I have a thought:  Let's re-examine associate lockstep.

Again, this is not the first time I've written about this; in "Fealty to Anachronisms," I reported last June on Howrey's ditching associate lockstep.  But it's time to revisit the issue.

To begin, it helps to step back and take a deep breath before we ask probing questions about a custom we take so very much for granted—one which has been ingrained as a core element of the "Cravath System" dating back to the turn of the prior century.

But if you look at our industry's practice of compensating associates from the perspective of corporate America—or even from the perspective of the putative "man in the street"—I'm put in mind of nothing so much as the New York Times music critic reviewing an early Verdi opera with an especially preposterous plot:  "If I tried to explain to you why Ernani kills himself, we'd be here all week and at the end you wouldn't believe me anyway."

Isn't that about right?  How on earth is it that we've brainwashed ourselves to believe  associate lockstep makes sense?

I submit that in no other business does compensation turn almost solely on year of graduation or year of admission to the profession.  Are we right and the rest of the for-profit economy wrong?  If you're with me at least to this point, now is the opportunity of an economic cycle to re-examine this hoary tradition.

The moment's propitious because, regardless of one's views of the health of our revenue streams going forward, savvy attention to cost is always a virtue, and given the recent spike in associate salary "going rates," real money is at stake.  (I might add that clients appear irrationally anything but exuberant about the associate salary spike.  This may make zero sense economically but it seems to clients to make great sense psychologically.  Ignore it at your peril.)

How then might you wean your firm away from associate lockstep?  Start by taking a page from the playbook of firms, such as Howrey and notably Latham, that have done it already.  Some ideas:

  • Create "bands" rather than "years," and group associates past the first or second year into perhaps three such bands of seniority.
  • Within each band, which would have a minimum, median, and maximum salary range, determine the place of individual associates based on 360° assessments.
  • Permit, indeed encourage, deviations from seniority; that is, after all, what this is all about.  Why not have a third-year who's a superstar earn more than a fifth-year who's hanging on by their fingernails? 
  • Deviations from seniority achieve a number of salubrious objectives:
    • They tell the truth to associates about how the firm views their performance;
    • The associate's costs begin to more roughly approximate their value to clients;
    • The firm can more wisely target its scarce salary and bonus dollars to those it wants to keep, now divorced from the artificial constraints of lockstep year-by-year compensation;
    • Billing partners are liberated from the awkward conversations with clients about associates' increased rates; if a client notes that a particular associate's rate has gone up, it's not because another year has ticked over on the calendar, but rather it's because the firm has decided that associate's performance—and value to the client—has increased.

Perilous times are often the most conducive to change.  As a managing partner said to me, "Change is easiest when the house is on fire."  Don't wait for the house to be on fire. 

But explore creative alternatives to business as usual.  Your partners, and your associates, will thank you for it.

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Posted to Compensation | Cultural Considerations | Finance | Practice Group Management | Strategy
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Rodrigo González Fernández
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Renato Sánchez 3586
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Soliciten nuestros cursos de capacitación en RESPONSABILIDAD SOCIAL EMPRESARIAL – LOBBY – BIOCOMBUSTIBLES    y asesorías a nivel internacional y están disponibles  para OTEC Y OTIC en Chile