Aba Legal Career Insights Podcast

Informações:

Synopsis

ABA Legal Career Central's Career Insights Podcast series is designed to explore with legal practitioners cutting edge issues, trends and practices impacting the legal profession and lawyers entering and growing in the profession. Each podcast will be led by an experienced interviewer who will introduce a subject that is current and will involve leading experts, academicians and practitioners reacting to the interviewers questions.

Episodes

  • Putting Your First Year Exams in Perspective

    14/12/2018 Duration: 12min

    First year exams are stressful. Let's consider historical rites of passage, the Ming dynasty Confucian civil service exam, and your upcoming career in an effort to provide some perspective to the process. Hosted by Joshua Jones. (12 minutes, 22 seconds)

  • The Fight-or-Flight Plight: Staying Calm During Bar Exam Prep

    22/06/2018 Duration: 12min

    Special guest podcast by the ABA Section of Litigation! Take less than 15 minutes to hear how to suppress your fight-or-flight response in times of extreme stress, like the bar exam. Our expert in witness preparation, with a background in Industrial-Organizational Psychology, offers essential test-taking and stress-management strategies for bar-takers. The guest is Matt McCusker of Convince, LLC. Matt is a nationally renowned Litigation Consultant with extensive plaintiff and defense experience in civil and criminal cases. He is a former president of the American Society of Trial Consultants and has a strong history of success in crafting winning strategies for trial teams, government entities and major corporations The host is Joshua Jones, a principal at Bressler, Amery & Ross, P.C. and a member of the ABA Section of Litigation. Josh focuses his practice in the defense of brokerage firms and financial institutions against claims asserted by their customers and employees in state and federal court and in

  • Character and Fitness - Part 2 of 2

    22/06/2018 Duration: 24min

    ABA Legal Career Central's Career Insights podcast is designed to explore cutting-edge issues, trends and practices impacting the legal profession and lawyers entering and growing in the profession. Each podcast is led by an experienced interviewer who will introduce a subject that is current and will involve leading experts, academicians, and practitioners reacting to the interviewer’s questions. In the second part of this program, our experts continue the conversation on how attorney character and fitness can be regulated, how the spotlight on lawyer misconduct has increased in the media (eg, a 60 Minutes story called “Against all odds” and several NYT articles in recent years, and how we see character and fitness evolving in the future given shifts in cultural and social norms. Speaker: David B. Wilkins, Lester Kissel Professor of Law, Director, Center on the Legal Profession, Vice Dean for Global Initiatives on the Legal Profession, Harvard Law School Moderator: Derek Davis, Executive Director, The Ce

  • Character and Fitness - Part 1 of 2

    21/05/2018 Duration: 34min

    ABA Legal Career Central's Career Insights podcast is designed to explore cutting edge issues, trends and practices impacting the legal profession and lawyers entering and growing in the profession.  Each podcast is led by an experienced interviewer who will introduce a subject that is current and will involve leading experts, academicians and practitioners reacting to the interviewer’s questions. It's no secret that some attorneys have reputations for being crooked, sneaky, or self-serving. Attorney misconduct has recently seen a resurgence in mainstream conversation in light of the #MeToo movement, the raid on President Trump’s attorney Michael Cohen, a 60 Minutes episode “Against the Odds,” and numerous New York Times articles. As cultural and societal norms shift, it's caused the profession to look back at the origin and application of the character and fitness prerequisite to practice law. What does it mean? How should it be regulated? Professor David Wilkinson argues that practicing good and virtuous