Litigation
Cal. Litig. 2021, Volume 34, Number 2
Content
- EDITOR'S FOREWORD PPP = POST-Pandemic Planning
- FROM THE SECTION CHAIR The Best Is Yet to Come
- How to Strike the Answer of a Non-Participating Defendant
- Jury Trials in the COVID-19 Era: The Importance of a Predetermined Trial Plan
- Masthead
- Navigating the Adversary Proceeding in Bankruptcy for General Litigators
- Recovering Attorney Fees in Arbitration
- Remedies for the Courthouse Flu: How to Get Your Civil Case Tried During the COVID-19 Crisis
- Revisiting California's No-Citation Rule
- Sheppard Mullin and Beyond: Advance Waivers, Disclosures, and Arbitration Agreements
- Table of Contents
- The CAA v. The FAA: The Dangerous Differences
- The Future of the Virtual Courthouse
- The Once and Future Office Market: A Tale of Complexity and Change for Lawyers
- Two #MeToos — A Pair of Book Reviews: "She Said" & "Catch and Kill"
Two #MeToos â A Pair of Book Reviews: "She Said" & "Catch and Kill"
Reviewed by Justice Therese M. Stewart
Justice Stewart is an Associate Justice on the California Court of Appeal, First Appellate District.
She Said, by Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey
She Said is a story of finding, recording, and reporting stories. And of the repercussions of exposing workplace sexual harassment and abuse. The authors, New York Times investigative reporters Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey, broke the story of Harvey Weinstein’s decades-long pattern of harassing actresses and not-so-famous women who worked with him. She Said recounts the reporters’ five-months-long effort to investigate whether Weinstein’s reputation for sexual mistreatment of women was more than just Hollywood rumor.