Legal News – LexBlogosphere: 8/27/2008
August 27, 2008
Today’s batch of posts from around the LexBlogosphere starts off with two very meaningful posts: Tami Cowden on why lawyers stay lawyers and Bob Little suggesting some serious change in the eDiscovery realm.
- It is time for a real change in our industry – eDiscovery expert and RenewData CMO Bob Little on their eDiscovery Source.
- Why we stay lawyers – Nevada appellate attorney Tami Cowden on her Appealing in Nevada.
- Preemption – It’s Not Just For Product Liability Anymore – product liability lawyer Michelle Lyu on Reed Smith’s Life Sciences Legal Update.
- Does 4 Million Equal 45 Million? – New Hampshire cerebral palsy lawyer Jim Burke on Burke & Eisner’s Cererbral Palsy Law Blog.
- A Conundrum: The Importance of Stupidity in Scientific Research – biopharmaceutical training and science career development specialist Cliff Mintz on BioInsights’ Bio Job Blog.
- California Quits Smoking, Saves $86 Billion – found on Dr. Joel Furhman’s DiseaseProof.
- Barbie v. Bratz: What Went Wrong for Mattel and Right for MGA – Philadelphia civil litigation and trial lawyer Max Kennerly on his blog, Litigation & Trial.
- Retaliate for Seeking Benefits? – Boston ERISA and insurance attorney Stephen Rosenberg on his Boston ERISA & Insurance Litigation Law Blog.
- 15 dead in Canadian listeria outbreak; government messages turn from bizarre to banal – food safety expert Doug Powell of the International Food Safety Network on their BarfBlog.
- Six Myths Regularly Encountered in Forensic Practices – Brain injury attorney Bruce Stern on Stark & Stark’s Traumatic Brain Injury Law Blog.
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