Home
Features
Viewpoints
Law Update
Practice Management
Lawyer2B
Careers
CPD/CLE
Downtime
Subscribe
Legal Jobs
Top Stories
Deals
Appointments
Folklaw
News by Law firm
Events
LW Awards
International Spotlight
Special Reports
Profiles
Opinion
Head to Head
Blogs
Top Cases
Top Legislation
Political Diary
In the Newspapers
Matters and Briefs
Skills & Education
Legal Careers Launchpad
Working Life
Alternative Careers
Best Practice
For Employers
For Employees
Search
Job Seeker Homepage
Set Email Alerts
LEGAL SEARCH
Legal Sites and Cases
Cases Only
Lawyers Weekly Site
Sign in or Join
Sign in
|
Join
Most Read
|
Most Commented
re: Countdown to Copenhagen for young climate change...
re: Industry leaders show young lawyers the ropes
re: From cop shop to legal crop
re: From cop shop to legal crop
re: Banking on career change: Jon North
Through good times and bad
Legislating greed
Shaping up for the future
Time is on our side
Double standards a risky opportunity
Subscriptions
Advertisement
FROM THE EDITOR'S DESK
The tipping point
The last couple of weeks have seen retrenchments at a number of high-profile law firms. The headlines sporting cutbacks have been frequent, as the top-tier of law in particular falls victim to economic ... [more]
The in-house appeal
Making the jump from private practice to the in-house department of an organisation can be a risky move, but it can be one that pays dividends in the long run. It's risky, because as appealing as an ... [more]
Redundancy a gut-wrencher
As I write, the five most-read articles on the Lawyers Weekly website all relate to redundancies (or rumours of them) being made in Australian law firms. And it's not at all surprising - the prospect ... [more]
Read before signing
Even with 10 people to consult, decisions can still go bad. Yet responsibility, somewhere, must be taken. Such was the situation concerning 10 former directors of James Hardie, who last week were found ... [more]
A question of scale
New Zealand might not be the finest example of an economy dealing with the financial crisis, but its legal sector may just have something to offer the rest of the world on how it's handling the meltdown ... [more]
MORE FROM THE EDITOR'S DESK
Relief for international law
New horizons breed a positive outlook
Positions, not people
Cuts to legal funding leave gap in our infrastructure
Making a pledge: A toothless tiger?
The underbelly of open justice
Double standards a risky opportunity
Time is on our side
Shaping up for the future
Legislating greed
» Archives
Advertisement