Survive with the Fittest Lawyers on Evolution Day with Blawg Review # 187

Leave it to a legal marketing blog -- Lawyer Casting - to choose Evolution Day for its first entry into the BlawgReviewOSphere. As blogger Joshua Fruchter explains in Blawg Review #187, because the anniversary of Charles Darwin's publication of The Origin of Species on November 24, 1859 is inextricably intertwined with the idea that only the fittest survive, Evolution Day should be celebrated with advice for survival. And so it is.
For those of us who toil the legal fields, Fruchter suggests a range of survival options including
- Excelling at Our Work with links to Drug and Device Law; Law Prof on the Loose; and our own post on sincere and effective apology.
- Switching Practice Areas with links to the Bankruptcy Practice Pro; The Volokh Conspiracy; Conglomerate; the Electronic Frontier Foundation; PomTalk; the Legal Blog Watch; Pepper Podcasts /*; and, the Antitrust Review.
- Going Solo with links to Charon QC (an interview with Susan Cartier Liebel about Solo Practice U; ) the greatest American Lawyer; and, Law21; and,
- Leaving Law with (what else?) Above the Law; JD Bliss; and, Rush on Business.
There's advice for law firms here as well, so crawl on out of the loser gene pool and make your way over to Blawg Review # 187. The survival of the legal species might just well depend upon it!
Note that Eric Turkewitz at the New York Personal Injury Law Blog will host Blawg Review #188. Anyone interested in participating in future blog carnivals should take a look at Blawg Review, which has information about next week's host and instructions on how to get your blawg posts reviewed in upcoming issues.
Finally, in true celebration of Evolution Day, take a look at some of the most enduring misconceptions about Darwin's paradigm breaking theory here, including the fact -- noted by Fruchter -- that Darwin did not originate the phrase "survival of the fittest."
________________
*/ Pepper Hamilton is podcasting?????? A short but vivid season of my legal career was served as a Pepper associate back in the late '80s (Alum Network here) when this grand old Philadelphia law firm turned 100 at which time it was still using quill pens - at least in the Philly office. In the Los Angeles office, we associates routinely gathered in the library (yes! with books) and were required to share the one Lexis/Nexis research station which we were forbidden to use except in the most dire circumstances and with pre-approval.