February 2017 Legal Ethics Top Blawgs
Covers legal malpractice basics, cases and news. By Andrew Lavoott Bluestone.
Edited by S. Alan Childress, Michael S. Frisch, Jeffrey M. Lipshaw and Nancy B. Rapaport.
By Professors John Dzienkowski, Brad Wendel, John Steele, David Hricik, Andrew Perlman, David McGowan, Laura Appleman, Steve Lubet, Anita Bernstein, Don Burnett, and Steve Berenson..
Covers the Florida bar admission and grievance process. By Brian Tannebaum.
Covers managing and growing your law practice, with a focus on technology, marketing, and management. By Merrilyn Astin Tarlton, Joan Feldman and Mark Feldman.
Focuses on bad prosecutors and bad prosecutorial acts. By the Bennett Law Firm.
Commentary and news about the Pennsylvania Legal community. By the Law Offices of Daniel J. Siegel, LLC.
Covers legal ethics and law practice. By Keith L. Miller, Esq.
Discusses of compliance, conflicts, intake and other risk issues for law firm risk professionals.
Covers governance in higher education and in law firms, bankruptcy ethics, popular culture and the law, Enron and other corporate fiascos, and professional responsibility generally. By Nancy Rapoport, a law professor at UNLV's Boyd School of Law.
Covers legal malpractice. By The Clinton Law Firm.
Covers employment litigation and dispute resolution. By O\'Rielly & Roche LLP.
Updates on professional liability with a particular emphasis on malpractice avoidance and attorney ethics. By Swartz Campbell.
Stories, movies, and books, all with the same there--how lawyers can help make a better world.
Focusing on law firm risk management: trends, challenges, conflicts, compliance, technology, information security, ethics & more.
Covers ethical issues and best practices in client relations, fees and financial management, law firm management, litigation, and the disciplinary process. By Kramer & Connolly.
Covers asset searches, bribery, due diligence, money laundering and scams. By Charles Griffin Intelligence.
The intersection of law practice, marketing, and technology. Leverage technology to increase revenue.
An independent blog supporting law and humanities activities and scholarship, including the work of the Law and Humanities Institute. Posts discuss law and the arts, law and history, and occasionally law and social sciences, and law and science. The blog posts calls for papers, news of conferences, special events, and other items of interest to those in the field.
Covers jurisprudence, legal realism, and legal theory. By Professor Brian R. Leiter and Prof. Daniel Filler