Litigation
Cal. Litig. 2020, Volume 33, Number 1
Content
- From the Section Chair What We've Done and What's to Come
- Editor's Foreword the Future Is Here
- Tech Tins: Making Use of Fastcase
- McLe Article A Trial Lawyer's Guide to Rule 3.3
- The Overworked Sentence
- Reoon: on the Los Angeles County Bar Association's Federal Courts Symposium Featuring Judges of the Central District of California
- What Is the Ccpa and Why Should Litigators Care?
- Artificial Intelligence Will Transform the Practice of Law
- Can Ai Sue in Federal Court?
- Current Legal Issues in Video Games and
- Embracing Evolution in the Delivery of Legal Services
- Capture the Flag: Winning With Forum Selection Clauses
- The Second Founding: How the Civil War and Reconstruction Remade the Constitution By Eric Foner
- Reflections on Becoming an Appellate Lawyer Hall of Famer
- The Publication of "That Book"
- Masthead
- Table of Contents
Embracing Evolution in the Delivery of Legal Services
By David Majchrzak
David Majchrzak is a seasoned ethicist, a certified specialist by the State Bar of California in legal malpractice law, and a shareholder with Klinedinst PC. David is rated AV"-Preeminent⢠by Martindale-Hubbell and, among many other bar-related activities, serves as co-chair of California Lawyers Associations first Ethics Committee.
Several jurisdictions and law-related organizations, including California, Arizona, Utah, the American Bar Association, and the Association of Professional Responsibility Lawyers, are considering making fundamental changes in the legal industry. This includes opening up the practice of law to a broader group of professionals, permitting non-lawyers to have ownership interests in law firms, and further revising advertising rules. Although these concepts are not new, they usually have been dismissed fairly quickly in the name of public protection. But these ideas are gaining traction and it may not pose as much a threat to litigants (or litigators) as many may instinctively suspect.