All contracts have them. After the parties carefully negotiate a contract, they often do not even consider or look at many of the boilerplate provisions that are in most contracts.
This presentation from a commercial litigator and in house counsel will discuss many of these boilerplate provisions, the pitfalls of many of them in practice and especially in the courts, and consider ways to draft them to benefit the parties in the transaction.
This presentation and more careful consideration of boilerplate provisions will bring you one step closer to avoiding the hidden dangers that lurk in your contracts.
For most new attorneys, learning how to frame an oral argument can be a daunting task. L...
This program provides immigration attorneys with a structured and strategic approach to developing e...
This program will address the ethical obligations of Lawyer Advocates representing clients in arbitr...
Contracting with the Federal Government is not like a business deal between two companies or a contr...
AI, an innovative technology that was once a supporting act for digital transformation, business str...
This interactive course is designed to equip legal professionals with the knowledge, tools, and stra...
Philip A. Greenberg, Esq., who has been a litigator in the State and Federal Com1s for 52 years, has...
State attorneys general continue to play a central and increasingly aggressive role in consumer prot...
“Everyone tells me I’m doing a great job. My clients, my colleagues, my family. Wh...
Between 1986 and now, the U.S. Government collected approximately $85 billion from Federal Contracto...