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New blogs joining the LexBlog Network for the week of 7/16-7/20

July 20, 2012

As we wind down yet another week (it’s absurd it’s almost August), we look back at the four publications joining the LexBlog Network over the last week. We have two environmental blogs, a couple from Fox Rothschild and an Australian firm getting going on a fourth LXBN publication.

  • As the header gives away, TELL is a publication of the Tennessee Environmental Law Letter, of which Bass Berry Sims attorney Andrew Goddard has served as editor and author on since 1989. The blog, which is the firm’s second on the LexBlog Network, will feature original and insightful commentary on environmental articles, cases and laws that affect businesses in Tennessee.
  • Trademark Watch is the 35th blog on the LexBlog Network from Fox Rothschild and, remember this for the [non-existent] LXBN trivia night, the first to not carry Fox Rothschild signature green design. The publication provides insight on issues in counterfeiting and brand enforcement.
  • Also from Fox Rothschild, making it number 36, we have the New Jersey Foreclosure Blog. The primary focus of this blog will be the law and procedure of mortgage foreclosure involving commercial properties in the State of New Jersey, though much of the information they provide will also be applicable in other states as well.
  • The second of two environmental law blogs to join the LexBlog Network this week is the Clean and Green Law Blog from Hodgson Russ. This, the firm’s third blog, covers topics that include green building, tax incentives, investing and green building.
  • I believe Makinson & D’Piece is the Australian law firm with most publication on the LexBlog Network as Australian Wills and Estates Law makes it four on LXBN for the firm. In their own words, the goal of the blog “is to encourage an active exchange of useful information and expertise between ourselves, our clients and others who are interested in the legal and strategic issues that are relevant to wills and estate planning and administration.”
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