self-study/Implicit bias and the promotion of bias-reducing strategies
Can implicit bias be countered?
By Steven S. Kimballself-study/Legal Ethics
What lawyers need to know before a CTAPP compliance review arrives
By Gary L. Krauszself-study/Legal Ethics
The ghost in the courtroom: From AI chatbots to 'agentic litigation'
By Timothy Spangler, Steven E. Youngself-study/Technology
Privilege survives AI only if lawyers do their job
By Arnold P. Peterself-study/Environmental Regulation
Providing environmental protection or merely performing it
By Nicholas Targself-study/Environmental Regulation
Providing environmental protection or merely performing it
By Nicholas Targself-study/Legal Ethics
California State Bar's proposed AI ethics rules put attorneys on notice
By Daniel Butlerself-study/Legal Ethics
New guidance, proposed rule changes on generative AI in legal practice
By Susie Dentself-study/Prevention and Detection Competence (substance use disorders and mental illness)
How meditation and Stoicism help lawyers manage stress and improve legal practice
By Ben Kassisself-study/Law Practice Management
What AI and CRM actually mean for lawyers
By George Brandonself-study/Torts
Beyond the warning label: Why 'design defect' is the new frontier in social media litigation
By Lem Garciaself-study/Constitutional Law
Historic preservation or constitutional taking? The next frontier in the Marilyn Monroe home dispute
By Zachary D. Schorrself-study/Administrative/Regulatory
When cannabis becomes medicine
By Mehdi Sinakiself-study/Technology
Modular micro-data centers in cooler climates: Geography, strategy and California's role
By Chang Kyoung (CK) Choi, Roberto Escobarself-study/Data Privacy
California's companion-chatbot law may be creating discoverable records in family law cases
By Hossein Berenjiself-study/Law Practice Management
From busy to billable: Time management strategies for business-generating lawyers
By George Brandonself-study/Criminal Law
Criminal relevance fundamentals
By Elia V. Pirozziself-study/Legal Ethics
The Wikipedia lawyer: Managing client expectations in an age of constant information
By Noel E. Guthself-study/Legal Ethics
When the bench has a memory: Prosecutors, the RJA and the limits of neutrality
By K. Chike Odiweself-study/Insurance
Xactimate is not the law: How insurers use one software program to underpay wildfire claims
By Barret Alexander, Shant A. KarnikianSELF-STUDY CREDIT:
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PARTICIPATORY CREDIT:
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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.