- Posted May 08, 2012
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
American Law Institute announces CLE
The American Law Institute has begun a new chapter in its efforts to provide education for the legal profession. Since 1947, the ALI has cooperated with the American Bar Association to offer CLE through ALI-ABA Continuing Professional Education. Now the ALI will begin producing CLE separately, under its own name, as will the American Bar Association.
Staff members who operated ALI-ABA will continue to work for the ALI, producing hundreds of live courses each year and offering thousands of hours of on-demand CLE.
The American Law Institute's CLE division will be led by ALI-ABA's Acting Executive Director, Nancy Mulloy-Bonn. It will continue to focus on innovative CLE for lawyers.
All of ALI-ABA's many educational products--live courses, webcasts, telephone seminars, on-demand courses, periodicals such as The Practical Lawyer--will continue to be offered by the ALI.
Experienced and renowned faculty and authors will work with the ALI to provide educational programs and materials of the highest quality and relevance in a legal landscape that is constantly shifting. To view the list of upcoming courses, visit www.ali-aba.org.
Published: Tue, May 8, 2012
headlines Oakland County
- Whitmer signs gun violence prevention legislation
- Department of Attorney General conducts statewide warrant sweep, arrests 9
- Adoptive families across Michigan recognized during Adoption Day and Month
- Reproductive Health Act signed into law
- Case study: Documentary highlights history of courts in the Eastern District
headlines National
- Judge is accused of using racial slur, vulgar terms and ‘libtard’ label for employee offended by his comments
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Colorado Supreme Court considers whether habeas petition can free zoo elephants
- 4th Circuit upholds $1M sanction for law firm that tried to ‘sabotage’ federal court’s authority
- Don’t give money to law schools unless they teach originalism, conservative federal appeals judge says
- Average BigLaw partner compensation increased 26% in 2 years, reaching this high-water mark