self-study/Civility
When going low no longer works: Strategic civility as the new power play in family law
By Noel E. Guthself-study/Implicit bias and the promotion of bias-reducing strategies
Workers on the spectrum and the quiet frontier of employee civil rights
By Pawanpreet K. Dhaliwalself-study/Torts
A mediator's perspective on health care negligence cases: From advocate to neutral
By Gary N. Sternself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
SB 707 updates Brown Act rules for online and remote meetings
By Kelly M. Doyleself-study/Legal Ethics
What law firm associates should know about their ethical obligations
By Alanna G. Clair, Shari L. Klevensself-study/Criminal Law
A practitioner's perspective on mentally disordered offender: MDO commitments and Assembly Bill 1897
By Robert Boyleself-study/Family Law
Facts, not findings: What practitioners get wrong about stipulations under Family Code § 3044
By Jackson Luckyself-study/Legal Ethics
Heppner case shows client AI interactions can break attorney client privilege
By William Slomansonself-study/Practice and Pleading
Why good mediation briefs matter
By Scott Hengesbachself-study/Legal Ethics
The power of communication in keeping cases moving and clients happy
By Robyn E. Frickself-study/Tax
IRS Notice 2025-69: How the new deductions for tips and overtime work in 2025
By Daniel Chungself-study/Alternative Dispute Resolution
Why litigation leaves everyone wrecked and the role of mediators after ABA Opinion 518
By Leonid M. Zilbermanself-study/Real Estate
California enacts law to speed contractor payment disputes on private projects
By Daniel F. McLennonself-study/Criminal Law
Judicial diversion fundamentals
By Michelle M. Ahnn, Holly L. Hancock-Goodeself-study/Evidence
You can't cross examine a machine
By Anita Taff-Riceself-study/Evidence
New law aims to combat pervasive spoliation of evidence in elder abuse cases
By Zachary N. Zaharoffself-study/Employment
How plaintiffs use Section 998 offers to compromise in employment discrimination cases
By Sean M. Novakself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
Department of Labor misinterprets VEVRAA, weakening veteran hiring requirements
By Eileen C. Mooreself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
What California's plastic bag ban reveals about regulating waste by material type
By Roberto Escobarself-study/Employment
Court of Appeal restores sanity to workers' comp treatment authorizations
By Brent Daub, Glenn OlsenSELF-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.