November 2018 Appellate Law Top Blawgs
Covers the Supreme Court of the United States. By Bloomberg Law.
Covers appellate litigation. By Howard J. Bashman.
Covers appellate law and advocacy.
Features news and resources for the Southern California appellate lawyer. By Nate Scott.
Features an appellate practitioner's take on practice and legal developments in the California Courts of Appeal, the California Supreme Court and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. By Greg May.
Thoughts on recent Ninth Circuit and California appellate cases, by University of San Diego School of Law Professor Shaun Martin.
Features news and commentary on the practice of law before the California Supreme Court. By Horvitz & Levy LLP.
Edited by David R. Cleveland, Kendall D. Isaac, Tonya Kowalski, Elizabeth Berenguer Megale and Randall L. Hodgkinson.
Features civil appellate practice tips, resources, and news. By D. Todd Smith.
Covers appellate issues affecting practice in Massachusetts and important appellate cases. By Cross Nadel LLC.
Follows the opinions of the South Carolina appellate courts, the Fourth Circuit, and the United States Supreme Court. By Womble Carlyle.
Covers the many flavors of appellate issues and law. By Dorothy Easley.
Covers federal appellate opinions from criminal cases where the defense won. By KaiserDillon PLLC.
Covers Alabama law.
Provides commentary and analysis on cases going in front of the Supreme Court of Ohio. By Marianna Bettman.
Educational legal blog written for the layman on criminal defense, personal injury, and civil rights topics.
Covers the Florida Supreme Court.
News and insight about appellate law. By Archer Norris, a professional law corporation.
Features caselaw updates and cites on causes of actions and affirmative defenses culled from Texas appeals court opinions. By Wolfgang Demino.
Covers significant tort and insurance coverage decisions in New York's Appellate Courts, cases which have been granted leave to appeal to the New York Court of Appeals, and other practice tips or information regarding appeals to New York's Appellate Courts. By Mauro Lilling Naparty LLP.