self-study/Administrative/Regulatory
SB 1159 extends California’s COVID-19 presumption of compensability
By Yvette Davis, Theodore A. Pennyself-study/Real Estate
Can you count?
By Guido I. Piottiparticipatory/Administrative/Regulatory
Arizona leads: Access to justice, innovative financing and legal paraprofessionals
By Howard B. Miller, Ann Timmerparticipatory/Administrative/Regulatory
California Legislature 2020: New bills you immediately need to know
By Howard B. Millerself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
Review new Title IX regulations, effective this month
By Pilar Morin, Anni Safarloo, David Urbanparticipatory/Administrative/Regulatory
Mediation advocacy: A master class
By Peter D. Lichtman, Howard B. Millerself-study/Alternative Dispute Resolution
How scared should we be? Vacatur of arbitration awards in the wake of Monster Energy
By Dustin Chase-Woods, Blaine I. Greenself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
The future of DACA is far from clear
By Suria M. Bahadue, Ethan D. Dettmerself-study/Civil Practice
The ‘catalyst theory’ of attorney fees
By Angela Reidparticipatory/Family Law
A family lawyer meets the moment
By Howard B. Miller, Stacy D. Phillipsself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
A new standard for determining waiver of work product privilege
By LaKeysia Beene, Jason E. Fellnerself-study/Intellectual Property
Recent developments in copyright law
By Neville L. Johnson, Douglas L. Johnsonparticipatory/Civil Procedure
Jurors, justice and technology
By Howard B. Miller, Douglas R. Youngparticipatory/Administrative/Regulatory
The FDA and qualified health claims: a case study
By Charles Andres, David M. Hoffmeister, Georgia C. Ravitz, James R. Ravitzparticipatory/Employment
Labor law and the now normal: COVID-19 and working from home
By Pankit J. Doshi, Howard B. Millerself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
NLRB decision runs over workers’ rights
By Ira L. Gottliebparticipatory/Litigation
Crisis for justice: Courts, clients and judges
By Micha Star Liberty, Howard B. Millerself-study/Class Actions
Trends emerge under Northern District’s class settlement guidelines
By Darren K. Cottriel, Brianne J. Kendall, Ann T. Rossumself-study/Torts
Government Claims Act
By Jeffrey Y. Hamilton Jr., Alex RicciardulliSELF-STUDY CREDIT:
Earn one hour of MCLE self-study credit by reading an article and answering questions. Submit a completed test and $36 payment for an MCLE certificate.
PARTICIPATORY CREDIT:
Earn one hour of general participatory credit by watching a video or listening to a podcast and answering questions. Submit a completed test and $36 payment for an MCLE certificate.
CERTIFICATION:
The Daily Journal Corporation, publisher of the Los Angeles and San Francisco Daily Journals, is approved by the State Bar of California as a continuing legal education provider. These self-study and participatory activities qualify for Minimum Continuing Legal Education credit in the amount of one hour. The Daily Journal Corporation certifies that this activity conforms to the standards for approved education activities prescribed by the rules and regulations of the State Bar of California.