PPP In the News
CNNMoney: Supreme Court ruling helps silence worker lawsuits. But these law students are fighting back
Lydia DePillis of CNNMoney wrote: ...students at the University of California-Berkeley, Harvard, Georgetown, Yale and a number of other colleges and universities began setting up petitions and asking their career counseling offices to pressure corporate recruiters...
Inside Higher Ed: Law Schools Release Survey of Firms’ Arbitration Policies
Andrew Kreighbaum wrote for Inside Higher Ed: ...The survey results showed several top law firms require arbitration for workplace disputes, although some noted that they do not require confidentiality and others exclude harassment or discrimination claims. Almost...
Above The Law: Which Biglaw Firms Still Require Summer Associates To Sign Mandatory Arbitration Agreements?
Kathryn Rubino wrote for Above The Law: ...In May, a survey letter on behalf of all T14 law schools went out to every law firm recruiting on their campuses, asking that the firms disclose whether they require summer associates to sign mandatory arbitration agreements...
Bloomberg Big Law Business: Many Big Law Firms Won’t Disclose Arbitration Policy
Stephanie Russell-Kraft wrote for Bloomberg: Nearly half of the 374 Big Law firms recently polled by U.S. law schools declined to say whether they require new associates to sign mandatory arbitration agreements. Dozens of U.S. law schools sent the survey to law...
Take Care Blog: The Results Are In: Law Firms & Mandatory Arbitrations
Leah Litman wrote for Take Care: ...Law students then got their career services offices (and the career services at a bunch of top law schools) to demand information from law firms recruiting on campus about whether the firms required their employees to sign...
The American Lawyer (Law.com): New Study Finds Most Law Firms Mum on Mandatory Arbitration for Summer Associates
Meghan Tribe wrote for Law.com: ...But perhaps more surprising was that of the nearly 400 law firms and legal organizations surveyed by students from 50 leading law schools, most firms chose not to respond. “Almost half of the firms who received the...
The American Lawyer (Law.com): Will Law Firms Bow to Pressure to End Mandatory Arbitration?
Meghan Tribe wrote for Law.com: ...Two months later, momentum against mandatory arbitration and nondisclosure agreements in Big Law is continuing to build. A growing chorus of critics—led by younger and aspiring lawyers who will one day shape the profession—expresses...
ABA Journal: Top law schools ask law firms to disclose arbitration agreements for summer associates
Stephanie Francis Ward wrote for the ABA Journal: After an outcry that law schools, not students, should be responsible for asking law firms about mandatory arbitration agreements and nondisclosure provisions for summer associates, 14 of the country’s top law schools...
Bloomberg Big Law Business: Law Students Push Back Against Mandatory Arbitration
Stephanie Russell-Kraft wrote for Bloomberg: ...The initiative is the result of grassroots campaigns mounted by students like Coleman at top U.S. law schools, who believe mandatory arbitration agreements effectively force employees to sign away their rights to go to...
Take Care Blog: #MeToo: Update on Arbitration-Related Advocacy
Leah Litman of Take Care wrote: ...Thanks to the effort of these students, the career services deans of a bunch of top law schools sent out a letter asking firms to report whether they require employees to sign mandatory arbitration or nondisclosure agreements. It’s a...
JD Journal: Law Schools Want to See Summer Associate Agreements
Amanda Griffin wrote for JD Journal: ...With the growing demand from students, a number of law schools will now require law firms that interview on their campus to complete a survey and provide information about arbitration provisions and other nondisclosure...
Inside Higher Ed: Law Schools Ask Firms for Harassment Policies
Andrew Kreighbaum wrote for Inside Higher Ed: Organizers have pushed for the disclosure of those policies, arguing they allow law firms to limit reports of workplace misconduct, including sexual harassment, to secretive forums that favor employers. ...“Contractually...