Most of the many hours he works each day are pro bono to help the administration with its policy on Iraq. |
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He's involved with an African-American church in South Central, he's done a lot of pro bono work with people in the deep south. |
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He did some pro bono work in order to establish a relationship with potential clients. |
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They have been prepared to provide help pro bono and they are lawyers who have experience in Asian courts, and so that is an offer we can make. |
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A group of lawyers conscripted to work pro bono sat down with representatives of the initial 62 plaintiffs. |
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This collective, along with his pro bono work for local community organizations, also yielded his initial client base. |
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He sits on the WOW advisory panel, and does pro bono work for numerous grassroots organizations. |
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But they said he did provide invaluable strategic guidance working pro bono to formulate legal theories and coach them in moot court sessions. |
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One approach would be to have independent monitors undertake multifaceted analysis of a firm's pro bono practice. |
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If you wish to get legal advice, your best bet is to contact the California Bar Association for the names of lawyers who do pro bono work. |
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Perhaps his biggest coup was to obtain the ostensibly pro bono services of the white-shoe law firm Simpson Thacher and Bartlett. |
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This is usually a minimal time commitment on the part of a lawyer who is already working pro bono for the organization. |
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But Sam is persistent, and, in an attempt to prove to her colleagues that she has a heart, she agrees to represent him pro bono. |
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She also received a letter from the Law Society offering her a monetary award for the pro bono work she did on the case, but she turned it down. |
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A legal firm offers on-site pro bono legal services for noncriminal matters to our patients. |
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Over the past decade, the practice and organization of pro bono publico has undergone dramatic changes within the American legal profession. |
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What we've been focusing on is providing tools for the legal profession to do pro bono work more easily. |
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Blackburn had read the pollution report too and was so concerned that he offered to take on the case pro bono. |
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If a person collect anything pro bono publico, and do not employ it accordingly, he may be indicted. |
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Working pro bono, the lawyers helped the group charge New Jersey with violating local residents' civil rights. |
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We have an outreach culture at Tipperary Institute which means pro bono face time with local schools, voluntary organisations and cash-strapped start-ups. |
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The concept of service pro bono publico is found at the very core of the profession. |
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Compilation of an overall figure is currently the subject of discussion. in-kind, or pro bono engagement. |
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Raising global awareness will help eradicate industry demand and encourage further pro bono efforts to end human trafficking. |
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While pro bono work is still done, it does not have the same impact on the overall system. |
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I am impressed by the number of lawyers who are devoting their time to defending linguistic issues pro bono or for a fraction of the real costs. |
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The consultants who are part of the UNDAC team are hired on a pro bono basis. |
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He is the director and officer of several charitable and community-based organizations where he provides counsel pro bono. |
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Finally, with the help of VMWBO, Dieu Hien was able to obtain a pro bono lawyer, sue her husband for abuse, leave Taiwan and return to Vietnam. |
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The Service augments its capacity through the engagement of interns, consultants and academic researchers working on a pro bono basis. |
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They are also required to provide a minimum of 12 hours of pro bono mediation per year. |
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Trying to motivate the Allies, he offered his assistance and cooperation to the profession as a whole, pro bono. |
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I also had students that I took on pro bono from underserved schools who were the first in their family to go to college. |
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Once we have paid off our mortgages, we will consider pro bono work. |
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Young barristers have traditionally worked pro bono for legal centres when no legal aid is available and where clients are unable to represent themselves. |
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Robinson said he is a longtime friend who is representing Smith pro bono. |
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But immigrants have very few places to go for pro bono legal advice. |
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Law firms and the like, which one used to think of as being able to do cases pro bono and to have other standards than money, were as much caught up in this as anywhere else. |
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Millions of tweens have already generously volunteered to work on the script, pro bono. |
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Assange has an international network of lawyers and legal advisers, many of whom work on a pro bono basis. |
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A great deal has been written in recent years about the social responsibility of lawyers and their ethical obligation to provide pro bono publico legal services. |
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According to my humble estimate of them, even our leading men are scarcely in the least cognizant that the pro bono egomet may be best served acting in the principle of the pro bono publico. |
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Moreover, in order to have interns available who can be immediately incorporated into the teams, the Registry has created the post of pro bono consultants. |
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In our case studies, there was heavy reliance on the volunteer participation of community members and the pro bono services of numerous experts and advisors. |
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None of this is intended to suggest that pro bono is a substitute for a well functioning legal aid system, and it does not detract from the priority for legal aid reform, to which I am committed. |
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The portal, to be launched on 9 December 2010, is being developed with state-of-the-art technology thanks to a pro bono contribution made by Microsoft to the first phase of the project. |
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I saw this client for two sessions, pro bono, and his issue was resolved. |
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He is involved in pro bono work for First Nations communities in the Northwest Territories, and is a principal in four small public oil and gas start-ups. |
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Many from these areas are prepared to provide pro bono advice and assistance to the committee as a public service, thus giving the committee expertise which it could not afford to obtain in any other way. |
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You can go to the pro bono clinic and get some advice. |
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Fewer and fewer lawyers are offering pro bono work. |
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The Tanganyika Law Society, in collaboration with other NGOs, had established a network of lawyers who provided pro bono services to those in need. |
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By organising mock court trials and pro bono work, universities are always offering ways for students to help show – and hone – these skills in a legal context. |
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Arguably, there is also an important relationship between the provision of pro bono services and the fees structures of many of Canada's major law firms. |
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In fact, the CBA respondent suggested that this practice is so common that many private bar lawyers are essentially operating pro bono clinics out of their offices. |
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Clinics were intended to give practical experience in law practice while providing pro bono representation to the poor. |
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He represented celebrities in trials pro bono. |
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Since polls are costly, the Group had asked the task force to consider ways to pool resources, tap outside expertise and seek pro bono assistance. |
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Plus, not acknowledging the work of reviewers, they face the risk to demotivate and lose the confidence of a large part of the numerous online magazines that work pro bono to promote their material. |
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The firm currently has about half a dozen pro bono cases at any one time. |
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Having returned to live in London, Vaughan Williams, with Ursula's encouragement, became much more active socially and in pro bono publico activities. |
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After he retired, he offered representation pro bono from time to time. |
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Corporate Pro Bono offers browsable information on its website, and other legal departments in similar areas or industries can offer invaluable advice. |
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