Inside In-House (Sep 1, 2021)
Recent reports on the ever-changing role of in-house counsel.
"Diversity Dipped Among Fortune 1000 GCs in 2020," Corporate Counsel
"Survey finds general counsel diversity stalled in 2020," Reuters
"What Nasdaq's Board Diversity Rules Might Mean for General Counsel," Corporate Counsel
"Law Firm's Summer Associate Competition Leads to Fresh Ideas for Its Corporate Clients," The American Lawyer
"'Frustrated' Legal Department Leaders Want Law Firms to Improve Data Reporting," Corporate Counsel
"Open Letter Urges General Counsel, Compliance Chiefs to Get Serious About Disability Inclusion," Corporate Counsel
"The GC at University of South Florida on How COVID-19, the Financial Collapse and the BLM Movement Impacted Higher Institutions," Corporate Counsel
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Movies and television have sparked people’s interest in becoming lawyers at least since the 1950s. For most people, their first and often only encounter with a lawyer or a courtroom comes from a movie that they watched. Many attorneys don’t want to admit it, but it was most likely a movie that inspired them to pursue law in the first place.
Every once in a while, a movie that follows a legal case based on a true story comes along and captures our imaginations. We follow the twists, turns, and emotions of the characters. When we then remember that the film is based on real events, these films take our breath away.