Law firm failures do not merely fall off into bankruptcy - they are spectacles of grand implosions. American law firms suffer from unique structural risks that can drive these formidable institutions to not just falter, but to rapidly collapse even when their balance sheets and profitability would suggest more durability in another industry. This phenomenon, far from random, stems from the fragile ownership structure unique to the legal industry. In an interview with Yale Law Professor John Morley, we take a deep dive into the inherent risks and dramatic consequences of law firm failures, and why this topic should command our attention.
(Credits: 1 Legal Ethics MCLE)
Weaponization of Outer Space
A Mindful Lawyer – Combatting Lawyer Stress
War Crimes – Israel & Gaza
Model Minority & Associates
Dying Without a Will
SFFA v. Harvard
Police Commands & Police Coercion
Inside the Shadow Docket
Economic Incentives for Diversity
Lady Justice
Regulating Crypto after FTX
God & Football after Bremerton
Recusal & the Bounds of Judicial Bias
WV v. EPA & the Major Questions Doctrine
Driverless Cars—A Shift in Risk
Gun Law after Bruen
Surrogates, Donors, & Same Sex Parental Rights
Newsworthiness – Press Freedom v. Privacy (Part 2)
Newsworthiness – Press Freedom v. Privacy
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
City Manager Unfiltered
Potencial Americano
The ASIC Podcast
The Chris Plante Show
Red Eye Radio