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A significant number of South African school staff screened between March 2024 and February 2025 have been flagged for criminal activity, including violent and sexual offence. This is according to to a report from background screening provider TPN. The report, which reviewed thousands of educators, coaches, administrative workers and grounds staff across SA schools, showed that one in 34 had a criminal record. Education experts warn the problem remains deeply entrenched and dangerous. FSakina Kamwendo spoke to Ashleigh Laurent who is the Legal Council at TPN; which is a a background screening provider.
Be sure to visit cultureproof.net Please consider supporting the Culture Proof Podcast. We aim to bring engaging content that will challenge and equip Christians to live according to the Straight Edge of Scripture. All gifts are tax deductible. Our Address is: S.E. Ministries PO Box 1269 Saltillo MS, 38866 Episode sponsors: BJUPress Homeschool We Heart Nutrition – Use the code CULTUREPROOF for 20% off Accountable2You – Try free for 10 days Forever-Written Culture Proof Listeners THANKS! Culture Proof Podcast Theme song "Believers" courtesy of Path of Revelation
ICYMI on Midday Mobile Sean Sullivan invited Attorney Wanda Rahman the In House Legal Council from the Sheriff Office in to talk about law and the Mobile Sheriff's Office. Rahman has 30 years of experience, from assistant district attorney to attorney and judge. She trains law enforcement officials, judges and court personnel on Constitutional and state law. Listen to their interesting conversation here:
Intro 0:00-4:00 Another Trump Assasination Attempt 4:00-25:00 Diddy 25:00-1:03:00 Exploding Paper 1:03:00-1:14:40 Tyreek Hill Arrest Breakdown From Actual Lawyers 1:14:40-1:32:00
Recorded live at CLOC Global Institute, this episode features legal leaders Jason Winmill (Argopoint, Buying Legal Council) and Katrina Gowans (IFM Investors). Jason underscored the importance of engaging with the community as a legal ops professional, and talked about how to navigate obtaining resources for your legal team. Katrina discussed her approach to finding the right pace when implementing change for the in-house team, and touched on her observations about the impacts generative AI tools are already having on legal work.
Content warning for discussion of genocide. Welcome to the first spisode of Have a Day! w/ The History Wizard. This episode will discuss the early days of the field of genocide, the process by which it became a crime undernational law, the life of Raphael Lemkin, in brief, and the first time a country was charged with this crime above all crimes Intro and outro music linked here: https://uppbeat.io/track/paulo-kalazzi/heros-time Episode Transcript to Follow: Hey, Hi, Hello. This is The History Wizard and thank you for joining me for the flagship episode of “Have a Day w/ The History Wizard”. As we embark on this journey together we're going to be talking about History, Politics, Economics, Cartoons, Video Games, Comics, and the points at which all of these topics intersect. Anyone who has been following me one Tiktok or Instagram, @thehistorywizard on Tiktok and @the_history_wizard on Instagram, for any length of time. Literally any length of time at all, will probably be familiar with some, if not all, of the information we're going to learn today. However, I hope that you'll bear with me as it is important to, before we dive into the meat of the matter, make sure we've got some bones to wrap it around… Yes, that is the metaphor I'm going to go with. I wrote it down in my script, read it, decided I liked it, and now you all have to listen to it. For our first episode we are going to be diving into one of my favorite parts of my field of expertise, meta knowledge concerning the field of genocide studies itself. Yes, that's right. We're going to start with the definition of genocide. The United Nations established the legal definition of genocide in the Convention for the Punishment and Prevention of the Crime of Genocide, which was unanimously adopted by the 51 founding members of the UN in the third meeting of the General Assemble and came into full legal force in 1951 after the 20th nation ratified it. This, by the way, is why none of the Nazis in the Nuremberg Trial were charged with the crime of genocide. The crime didn't exist when they were on trial. But, to return to the matter at hand, the definition of genocide can be found in Article 2 of the Convention for the Punishment and Prevention of the Crime of Genocide and reads as follows: In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: Killing members of the group; Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group. It is important to note that definition of genocide that the UN adopted is not exactly the same as the definition that Lemkin first proposed to the UN. His definition included economic classes, as well as political parties. There was, significant, pushback against the inclusion of those two categories from the US and the USSR as both nations feared that their many of their own actions could be considered genocide. Lemkin didn't fight too hard for those categories to stay in the definition, he was more concerned with ethnicity, nationality, race, and religion for, what he called, their cultural carrying capacity. Now, despite Lemkin's concern over the destruction of cultures, there is no strict legal definition of cultural genocide. The inclusion of Article 2, subsection E: Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group, could be seen as a nod to this idea, but it's not nearly enough. There was some effort to rectify this oversight in 2007 with the passage of the UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, which states that indigenous peoples have a right against forcible assimilation. But even that is barely a step in the right direction as the UN DRIP is a legally non binding resolution making it little better than a suggestion. Now, where did the word genocide come from? Who made it and why? The term genocide was the brain child of a Polish-Jewish lawyer and Holocaust survivor named Raphael Lemkin. Now, despite Lemkin being a Holocaust survivor and term not gaining legal recognition until 1948, Lemkin actually based his work on the Armenian Genocide, what he originally called The Crime of Barbarity. Fun fact about Lemkin, he spoke 9 languages and could read 14. Anyway, after reading about the assassination of Talat Pasha in 1921. Talat was assassinated by Soghomon Telhirian as part of Operation Nemesis (he was put on trial for the assassination and was acquitted) After reading about the assassination Lemkin asked one of his professors at Jan Kazimierz University of Lwów (now the Ivan Franko National University of Lviv) why Talat was unable to be tried for his crimes before a court of law. The professor replied thusly: "Consider the case of a farmer who owns a flock of chickens. He kills them, and this is his business. If you interfere, you are trespassing." Lemkin replied, "But the Armenians are not chickens". His eventual conclusion was that "Sovereignty cannot be conceived as the right to kill millions of innocent people" In 1933 Lemkin made a presentation to the Legal Council of the League of Nations conference on international criminal law in Madrid, for which he prepared an essay on the Crime of Barbarity as a crime against international law. This is where the world would first encounter the word “genocide” a word that Lemkin had created by combining the Greek root ‘genos' meaning race or tribe, with the Latin root ‘cide' meaning killing. Lemkin was as a private solicitor in Warsaw in 1939 and fled as soon as he could. He managed to escape through Lithuania to Sweden where he taught at the University of Stockholm until he was, with the help of a friend, a Duke University law professor named Malcolm McDermott Lemkin was able to flee to the US. Unfortunately for Lemkin he lost 49 member of his family to the Holocaust. The only family that survived was his brother, Elias and his wife who had both been sent to a Soviet forced labor camp. Lemkin was able to help them both relocate to Montreal in 1948. After publishing his iconic book “Axis Rule in Occupied Europe” with the help of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Lemkin became an advisor for chief prosecutor of the Nuremberg Trials, Robert H. Jackson. It was during these trials that he became convinced, more than ever before, that this crime above all crimes needed a name and laws to prevent and punish it. Even after the passage of the Convention for the Punishment of the Crime of Genocide Lemkin didn't consider his work to be over. The UN was brand new and had little in the way of real authority (something that hasn't changed over the past 70 years). So Lemkin traveled around to world trying to get national governments to adopt genocide laws into their own body of laws. He worked with a team of lawyers from Arabic delegations to try and get France tried for genocide for their conduct in Algeria and wrote an article in 1953 on the “Soviet Genocide in Ukraine” what we know as the Holodomor, though Lemkin never used that term in his article. Lemkin lived the last years of his life in poverty in New York city. He died in 1959 of a heart attack, and his funeral, which occurred at Riverside Church in Manhattan, was attended by only a small number of his close friends. Lemkin is buried in Mount Hebron Cemetery in Flushing, Queens. The last thing I want to discuss in our first episode is the first country to be charged with the crime of genocide before the United Nations. As we have already established, despite the Holocaust being the western world's premiere example of genocide, no one at the Nuremberg Trials was tried for the crime of genocide. So who, I can hear you asking from the future, who was the first country charged with genocide? Why, dear listener, it was none other than the U S of A in a 1951 paper titled “We Charge Genocide, which was presented before the United Nations in Paris in 1951. The document pointed out that the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide defined genocide as any acts committed with "intent to destroy" a group, "in whole or in part." To build its case for black genocide, the document cited many instances of lynching in the United States, as well as legal discrimination, disenfranchisement of blacks in the South, a series of incidents of police brutality dating to the present, and systematic inequalities in health and quality of life. The central argument: The U.S. government is both complicit with and responsible for a genocidal situation based on the UN's own definition of genocide. The paper was supported by the American Communist Party and was signed by many famous personages such as: W. E. B. Du Bois, George W. Crockett, Jr., Benjamin J. Davis, Jr., Ferdinand Smith, Oakley C. Johnson, Aubrey Grossman, Claudia Jones, Rosalie McGee, Josephine Grayson, Amy and Doris Mallard, Paul Washington, Wesley R. Wells, Horace Wilson, James Thorpe, Collis English, Ralph Cooper, Leon Josephson, and William Patterson. It was Patterson who presented the paper and the signatures before the UN in 1951. The UN largely ignored Patterson and never deigned to hear his case against the US government. And upon his return journey Patterson was detained while passing through Britain and had his passport seized once he returned to the US. He was forbade to ever travel out of the country again. The history of the field of genocide studies is long, unfortunately, far longer than the existence of a word with a legal definition and laws to back it up. We'll be going through the history of genocide in future episode, interspersed with other historical events or pressing issues of great import as we take this educational journey together. I'm going to try and put an episode together once a week, and if that needs to change for any reason I will let you know. Next week, on March 26th, we'll be learning about the Gazan genocide and the vast amount of historical context that goes into this, currently occurring, genocide. I've been the History Wizard. You can find me on Tiktok @thehistorywizard. You can find me on Instagram @the_history_wizard. Have a Day w/ The History Wizard can be found anywhere pods are cast. If you cannot find it on your podcatcher or choice, let me know and I will try and do something about it. Tune in next week for more depressing, but very necessary information and remember… Have a Day!
How you buy and sell homes is about to change... a new agreement just reached will toss out the old rules that stuck a home seller with paying 6% commission of the sale price to their real estate agent and THE BUYER's agent. On a sale of a $500k home the seller would be dinged for $30k... That model is being dissolved. And this is good news for sellers. Dave and Debbie speak with Kreg Wagner, Legal Council with the Utah Association of Realtors about what this means.
Did you know that unpaid doctor and hospital bills can lower your credit score? The Biden administration is taking steps to stop that from happening. Reset checks in with Edith Avila Olea from the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights and Carrie Chapman from the Legal Council for Health Justice. If you like this podcast, you may be interested in our interview on why more adults over 65 are giving cannabis a try. You can also check out our full catalog at wbez.org/reset.
Robert Montgomery III, Esq. PC (Dental Amigos Podcast) is the guest on todays show! He founded a leading boutique law firm, focusing on counseling dentists, dental practices and dental service organizations in a full range of business matters affecting dental practices. You can connect with Rob by calling
Recorded at the 2022 Fall Conference, we sat down with Emily Bloedel, the Co-Chair of the Legal Council Forum to discuss their work at the conference and the Forum's importance for ACEC member firms. Background: The Legal Counsel Forum was created so that counsel to ACEC member firms could meet and share information about legal issues facing engineering companies. Such individuals can register for the Forum and be included in the Forum's listserv upon request. Over time, it has also become customary for professional liability insurance specialists to take part in the Forum and Listserv at the invitation of the Chair. The LCF meets for a day and a half in conjunction with the ACEC Annual Convention and Fall conference. The Chair of the Forum prepares a draft agenda that is circulated to the Forum participants shortly before the meeting. The agenda is finalized at the meeting itself. Past discussion topics have included: Economic Loss Doctrine Building Information Modeling (BIM) and Integrated Project Delivery Downsizing Limitation of Liability Clauses Document Retention Policies
This week on The Marvelists presents “Legal Council: A She-Hulk Podcast,” we talk about the season finale! As Jenn learns more about the Intelligencia, she finds out there is a lot more than she bargained for. Follow The Marvelists on social media: Twitter/Instagram: @TheMarvelists Subscribe to The Marvelists on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGe72jbm8J5IXsINZvrJAhg Support the show on Patreon: http://www.Patreon.com/themarvelists Buy our t-shirt: http://www.belowthecollar.com/themarvelists
This week on The Marvelists presents “Legal Council: A She-Hulk Podcast,” we talk about episode 8 - Ribbit or Rip It. This is the one you've all been waiting for. Yes, we finally get to see Leap Frog! Oh? Daredevil? Sure, him too. Follow The Marvelists on social media: Twitter/Instagram: @TheMarvelists Subscribe to The Marvelists on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGe72jbm8J5IXsINZvrJAhg Support the show on Patreon: http://www.Patreon.com/themarvelists Buy our t-shirt: http://www.belowthecollar.com/themarvelists
This week on The Marvelists presents Legal Council: A She-Hulk Podcast, we are joined with Jenna Anderson of ComicBook.com to talk episode 7 - The Retreat. Shulkie learns to find inner peace after getting ghosted by Josh thanks to the help of… Abomination? Follow The Marvelists on social media: Twitter/Instagram: @TheMarvelists Subscribe to The Marvelists on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGe72jbm8J5IXsINZvrJAhg Support the show on Patreon: http://www.Patreon.com/themarvelists Buy our t-shirt: http://www.belowthecollar.com/themarvelists
This week on The Marvelists present Legal Council - A She-Hulk Podcast, IT'S WEDDING SEASON! Yes, the most wonderful time of the year if you're a fan of wedding cake and/or free alcohol. Shulkie must get through her friend's big day. But wait, is that Titania? Uh oh… Follow The Marvelists on social media: Twitter/Instagram: @TheMarvelists Subscribe to The Marvelists on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGe72jbm8J5IXsINZvrJAhg Support the show on Patreon: http://www.Patreon.com/themarvelists Buy our t-shirt: http://www.belowthecollar.com/themarvelists
This week on The Marvelists presents: Legal Council - A She-Hulk Attorney at Law Podcast, we talk about episode 5 of the series. As Jen goes to battle in court against Titania, she must also figure out her new presentation and visits the costumer of the super heroes! Follow The Marvelists on social media: Twitter/Instagram: @TheMarvelists Subscribe to The Marvelists on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGe72jbm8J5IXsINZvrJAhg Support the show on Patreon: http://www.Patreon.com/themarvelists Buy our t-shirt: http://www.belowthecollar.com/themarvelists
This week on The Marvelists presents: Legal Council - A She-Hulk Attorney at Law Podcast, we talk about episode 4 of the series. Wong needs legal representation and Jennifer Walters is the only one who can supply it! We're also introduced to Madisynn who in turn gives a brand new nickname for the Sorcerer Supreme! Follow The Marvelists on social media: Twitter/Instagram: @TheMarvelists Subscribe to The Marvelists on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGe72jbm8J5IXsINZvrJAhg Support the show on Patreon: http://www.Patreon.com/themarvelists Buy our t-shirt: http://www.belowthecollar.com/themarvelists
This week on The Marvelists presents: Legal Council - A She-Hulk Attorney at Law Podcast, we talk about episode 3 of the series. Now legally representing Abomination, Jennifer must figure out what it is like to defend a known (yet reformed) criminal. We also talk about *that* post-credits scene. Follow The Marvelists on social media: Twitter/Instagram: @TheMarvelists Subscribe to The Marvelists on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGe72jbm8J5IXsINZvrJAhg Support the show on Patreon: http://www.Patreon.com/themarvelists Buy our t-shirt: http://www.belowthecollar.com/themarvelists
Join Marquette as she interviews Marnie Schneider, the granddaughter of former Philadelphia Eagles owner Leonard Tose. Marnie's mother was the very first, and still only in history the NFL, General Manager, Vice President & Legal Council for a football team. She tells us all about growing up in her football family, and the many lessons she learned from her grandfather and mom. Marnie's passion for sports shines through in her book series, Gameday in the USA. The series is in the Top 100 Kids Sports Travel books by Amazon. Writing the stories has been her way of giving back to the many great football communities across the nation. The series includes 8 books that focus on a city and its football team. It follows lovable characters, Football Freddie and Fumble the Dog, and the rich history and culture of each city they visit. She is a board member of & is very active in several Charities & Organizations such as: ● Ronald McDonald House ● Alzheimer's Association ● Soldiers to Sidelines - ● NFL Alumni Organization And she travels all over the country doing book readings at schools, first-responder events, youth sports clubs and businesses. #dallas #dallasCEO #dallasentrepreneur #dallaspodcast #dallaspodcasts #mindbodydallas #marnieschneider #gamedayintheusa #footballseason #football #footballfamily #PhiladelphiaEagles #flyeaglesfly #leonardtose #femaleentrepreneur #SheEO #girlboss #bosslady #CEO #author #ronaldmcdonaldhouse #childhoodcancer #childhoodillness #AlzheimersAssociation #Alzheimers #doglove #rescuedog #humanesociety #soldierstosidelines #thankyouveterans #thankaveteran #veterantocoach #veterans #USVeteran #godblessamerica #labordayweekend #nflalumniorganization #nfl #nflalumni #nflpodcast #footballfreddie #childrensbooks #fumblethedog --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This week on The Marvelists, we continue our discussion of She-Hulk with episode 2, Superhuman Law! on this episode, Jennifer figures out what she has to do with her life following her now becoming the green arm of the law. In addition, some neat Easter eggs are shown to the viewer. What could this mean for the future of the MCU? Follow The Marvelists on social media: Twitter/Instagram: @TheMarvelists Subscribe to The Marvelists on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGe72jbm8J5IXsINZvrJAhg Support the show on Patreon: http://www.Patreon.com/themarvelists Buy our t-shirt: http://www.belowthecollar.com/themarvelists
This week on The Marvelists, we kick off our She-Hulk recap show, Legal Council! Joined with friend of the show, Matt Cascone, we delve into the first episode, “A Normal Amount of Rage.” Watch as Shulkie learns the ropes of what it's like to become the jade giantess! Follow The Marvelists on social media: Twitter/Instagram: @TheMarvelists Subscribe to The Marvelists on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGe72jbm8J5IXsINZvrJAhg Support the show on Patreon: http://www.Patreon.com/themarvelists Buy our t-shirt: http://www.belowthecollar.com/themarvelists
Earlier this year, Congress passed the No Surprise Act, that looked to cap big bills from private medical companies and independent physicians. Yet, uninsured patients are still being blind-sided in tens of thousands of dollars in bills. Reset examines the inaccessible healthcare here in Chicago. GUESTS: Kristen Schorsch, WBEZ's public health and politics reporter Carrie Chapman, senior director of policy and advocacy at the Legal Council for Health Justice in Chicago Edith Avila Olea, policy manager with the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights
In this "Throwback Tuesday" HCI Podcast episode, Dr. Jonathan H. Westover (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathanhwestover/) talks with Dr. Shannon Prince about using metrics to support diversity, equity, and inclusion. See the video here: https://youtu.be/IAgPZKFEqKc. Dr. Shannon Prince (linkedin.com/in/shannon-prince-04573a211) is an attorney and legal commentator. She earned her doctorate in African and African American Studies and her master's degree in English from Harvard University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, her law degree from Yale Law School, and her bachelor's degree from Dartmouth College. She drafted best practice language on policing policies for the National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice, represented plaintiffs in CCJEF v. Rell, a high-profile landmark education adequacy lawsuit, and is currently representing the Cherokee Nation in their lawsuit against pharmaceutical distributors and pharmacies for their role in the opioid crisis that the tribe is suffering. She is a member of her firm's Firm Diversity Council and is a Legal Council on Legal Diversity Pathfinder. Her writing has been published in The Hill, Transition Magazine, Science, and Jezebel among other venues, and she has a book on antiracism forthcoming from Routledge called Tactics for Racial Justice. Please leave a review wherever you listen to your podcasts! Check out the LinkedIn Alchemizing Human Capital Newsletter: https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/alchemizing-human-capital-6884351526333227008/. Check out Dr. Westover's book, 'Bluer than Indigo' Leadership, here: https://www.innovativehumancapital.com/bluerthanindigo. Check out Dr. Westover's book, The Alchemy of Truly Remarkable Leadership, here: https://www.innovativehumancapital.com/leadershipalchemy. Check out the latest issue of the Human Capital Leadership magazine, here: https://www.innovativehumancapital.com/hci-magazine. Ranked #6 Performance Management Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/performance_management_podcasts/ Ranked #6 Workplace Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/workplace_podcasts/ Ranked #7 HR Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/hr_podcasts/ Ranked #12 Talent Management Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/talent_management_podcasts/ Ranked in the Top 20 Personal Development and Self-Improvement Podcasts: https://blog.feedspot.com/personal_development_podcasts/ Ranked in the Top 30 Leadership Podcasts: https://blog.feedspot.com/leadership_podcasts/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/hcipodcast/support
Do you want to better understand ways to create diverse, equitable, inclusive and anti-racist cultures and organizations? Are you looking for practical tools to achieve this objective? Are you ready to take on the challenges of diversity, equity and inclusion in your organization? Our special guest Dr. Shannon Prince answers these and other questions about leadership, diversity, equity and inclusion, world crafting, and creating anti-racist cultures and organizations. Shannon Prince is an attorney, legal commentator, and speaker. She earned her doctorate in African and African American Studies and her master's degree in English from Harvard University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, her law degree from Yale Law School, and her bachelor's degree magna cum laude from Dartmouth College. She drafted best practice language on policing policies for the National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice, represented plaintiffs in CCJEF v. Rell, a high-profile landmark education adequacy lawsuit, and is currently representing the Cherokee Nation in their lawsuit against pharmaceutical distributors and pharmacies for their role in the opioid crisis that the tribe is suffering. She is a member of her firm's Firm Diversity Council and is a Legal Council on Legal Diversity Pathfinder. Her writing has been published in The Hill, Transition Magazine, Science, and Jezebel among other venues, and she's the author of Tactics for Racial Justice due out in January 2022. The Leadership Junkies Podcast is brought to you by Cardivera.com. Show Notes Episode highlights… Moving beyond words and getting into diversity, equity and inclusion action Differently understanding systemic racism (getting beyond the idea that racism is about bad people) Understanding the realities of racism in business today Using metrics to track disparities in impact Making changes in diversity, equity and inclusion requires a focus on practices more than intentions Understanding intersectionality in biases Fundamentals of DEI training Training doesn't work in the absence of other diversity initiatives Navigating the “we hire the best people” concept in light of diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives (understanding the role of unconscious biases) The reality that more diverse companies outperform less diverse companies Different practices you can use to increase your diversity, equity and inclusion The importance of hiring for diversity, equity and inclusion mindsets The of recruitment changes to build a more diverse, equitable and inclusive organization Understanding the role of bias interrupting in creating more diverse and inclusive organizations The importance of being more aware of your biases and assumptions (cultural metacognition) Exploring ways that bias has an unintended impact on the lack of diversity Ways that anti-racism initiatives are needed beyond diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives Ways to amplify your communication and conversations about diversity, equity and inclusion issues What you can do to create a safe place for your team to have open conversations about diversity, equity and inclusion The role of vulnerability in diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives and conversations Practicing world crafting by thinking like an ancestor … what future will you help create Resources: Shannon Prince Boies Schiller Flexner Law Firm Website Tactics for Racial Justice: Building and Anti-Racist Organizations and Community book by Dr. Shannon Prince (due out in January 2022) (LEADERSHIP JUNKIES DISCOUNT CODE: FLY21) The Leadership Junkies Podcast Cardivera Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this HCI Podcast episode, Dr. Jonathan H. Westover (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathanhwestover/) talks with Dr. Shannon Prince about using metrics to support diversity, equity, and inclusion. See the video here: https://youtu.be/IAgPZKFEqKc. Dr. Shannon Prince (linkedin.com/in/shannon-prince-04573a211) is an attorney and legal commentator. She earned her doctorate in African and African American Studies and her master's degree in English from Harvard University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, her law degree from Yale Law School, and her bachelor's degree from Dartmouth College. She drafted best practice language on policing policies for the National Initiative for Building Community Trust and Justice, represented plaintiffs in CCJEF v. Rell, a high-profile landmark education adequacy lawsuit, and is currently representing the Cherokee Nation in their lawsuit against pharmaceutical distributors and pharmacies for their role in the opioid crisis that the tribe is suffering. She is a member of her firm's Firm Diversity Council and is a Legal Council on Legal Diversity Pathfinder. Her writing has been published in The Hill, Transition Magazine, Science, and Jezebel among other venues, and she has a book on antiracism forthcoming from Routledge called Tactics for Racial Justice. Check out Dr. Westover's new book, 'Bluer than Indigo' Leadership, here: https://www.innovativehumancapital.com/bluerthanindigo. Check out Dr. Westover's book, The Alchemy of Truly Remarkable Leadership, here: https://www.innovativehumancapital.com/leadershipalchemy. Check out the latest issue of the Human Capital Leadership magazine, here: https://www.innovativehumancapital.com/hci-magazine. Ranked #6 Performance Management Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/performance_management_podcasts/ Ranked #6 Workplace Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/workplace_podcasts/ Ranked #7 HR Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/hr_podcasts/ Ranked #12 Talent Management Podcast: https://blog.feedspot.com/talent_management_podcasts/ Ranked in the Top 20 Personal Development and Self-Improvement Podcasts: https://blog.feedspot.com/personal_development_podcasts/ Ranked in the Top 30 Leadership Podcasts: https://blog.feedspot.com/leadership_podcasts/
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Philippe Heller speaks with Ben Garrison, the National Program director, and Joe Denneler, the Legal Council for Elite MGA, an E&O insurance company that covers home inspectors. Hear why inspectors in California face such high liability insurance costs, which are the result of some unbelievable lawsuits directed towards home inspectors. And when an inspector gets sued, agents get named also. Learn how to reduce your risk, and leverage the home inspection to reduce your liability. -The Real Estate Inspection Company | SDinspect.com | (800) 232-5180IG @the_real_estate_inspection_co | FB @sdinspectionsIf you would like to be featured on our Podcast, email Podcast@SDinspect.com
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"You have to believe you're a part of seven billion ecosystems, and you are going to do you little part, and know that the next person will do theirs."In this week's episode of the Change Happens #podcast, Jenelle McMaster is joined by Australia's longest serving Sex Discrimination Commissioner (2007-2015), globally acknowledged leader, social innovator and advocate Elizabeth Broderick AO, who shares her insights on gender equality, how she goes about creating change and the lessons learned along the way in her fight to advance the rights of women and girls worldwide.Listen now on: Apple Podcasts or Spotify or where ever you get your favourite podcasts.Host: Jenelle McMaster is Managing Partner, Oceania Markets at EY. Guest: Elizabeth Broderick AO is Independent Expert (UN Special Rapporteur), UN Human Rights Council and Australia's longest serving Sex Discrimination Commissioner (2007-2015), globally acknowledged leader, social innovator and advocate.
Despite threats of jail time, Bernard Collaery, representative of Witness K, has published his book Oil Over Troubled Water: Australia's Timor Sea Intrigue and phoned in to The Grapevine to unpack his legal battles with the government.And Dave Nichols, Associate Professor in Urban Planning at the University of Melbourne returns for his monthly segment to discuss the role of urban planning in disease prevention. Then, existential dread, James Button gets on the line to discuss people's fears for the future he investigated in his essay The Climate Interviews for the The Monthly.
What you’ll learn in this episode: How Buying Legal Council serves its members and legal marketing professionals in the area of legal procurement through advocacy, education and networking. The three key takeaways from Buying Legal Council’s conference on data-driven decision making. Why the involvement of procurement officers in the process of obtaining legal services is here to stay and will only increase in the future. Why diversity & inclusion and pricing have become particularly important to companies when selecting legal services. Examples of innovative strategies businesses have implemented in their procurement processes. About Dr. Silvia Hodges Silverstein Dr. Silvia Hodges Silverstein is the executive director of Buying Legal Council, the international trade organization for legal procurement, and an adjunct professor at Columbia Law School and Fordham Law School in New York. An expert on the purchasing behavior of clients when buying legal services, Silvia is an editor and author of several books, articles and Harvard Business School case studies on the topics of legal procurement initiatives and law firm management. She holds a Legal Lean Sigma & Project Management White Belt certification and is a Fellow of the College of Law Practice Management. Silvia earned her PhD at Nottingham Law School (UK) and holds a Master’s Degree in Business Administration from Universität Bayreuth (Germany) and Warwick Business School (UK) as well as an Undergraduate Degree in Economics from Universität Bayreuth (Germany). Additional resources: Buying Legal Council Website Legal Procurement & Legal Operations Handout Harvard Business School Case Studies: GlaxoSmithKline: Sourcing Complex Professional Services Riverview Law: Applying Business Sense to the Legal Market Law Review Articles: “I Didn’t Go to Law School to Become a Salesperson—The Development of Marketing in Law Firms” “What We Know and Need to Know About Legal Procurement” Legal Procurement Handbook Winning Proposals: The Essential Guide for Law Firms and Legal Services Providers Twitter Buying Legal Council LinkedIn Silvia’s LinkedIn
SPEAKERS: Judy Tisdale, Club Traveler Human Resources Development, Levi Strauss (Ret.) Leon Drozd, Club Traveler In-house Legal Council, Chevron Corporation (Ret.) Claudia Livingston, Club Traveler Pediatrician, Children’s Hospital in Oakland (Ret.) Madhu Mehta, Club Traveler Engineer (Ret.) Kristina Nemeth Commonwealth Club Travel Director, Moderator This program was recorded in front of a live audience at The Commonwealth Club of California in San Francisco on October 21st, 2019.
Marcella Dominguez graduated with her JD in 2011 from Thomas M. Cooley School of Law now known as Western Michigan University Cooley Law School in Grand Rapids, Michigan. She returned to her native hometown of El Paso, TX and was admitted to the Texas Bar in 2013. Ms. Dominguez initially started as trademark attorney in TX and later expanded on a nationwide basis. Her strong interest in Trademark Law and Copyright Law is driven by her belief that protecting creativity is crucial to lasting success. Her personal creative pursuits, such as managing stoweyjoey.com- a company inspired by her own kids, gives her a unique perspective that other creative legal counsel may lack. She can hardly call her passion for defending the rights of creatives as work. Join us in the Business Spotlight October 8 at 1pmET/10amPT and anytime in archive. Connect with Marcella on Facebook,Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn. Thank you sponsors Safety Bags, Inc and StadiumBags.com and No Such Thing as a Bully and Smith Sisters Bluegrass. Connect with us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. For info email dori@wordofmomradio.com. #WordofMom ~ Sharing the Wisdom of Women
LISTEN, SUBSCRIBE, AND RATE Every week, Indivisible Chicago Podcast host Tom Moss talks to politicians, newsmakers, academics and activists about resisting the Trump agenda. The ICP is also a great way to keep up with what’s happening in Indivisible Chicago. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts or listen online at IndivisibleChicago.com/podcast. Take a minute to rate us on iTunes. It helps us get the word out about the ICP. https://apple.co/2oR4UlH INDIVISIBLE CHICAGO PODCAST SHOW NOTES AND ACTIONS FOR MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 2019 Opening: When it comes to the Democratic debates, what’s more important? What is said by the candidates at the debate? Or what is said by the media about the candidates before and after the debate? Jeff Favre is a journalist, a professor of journalism, Chicago native, and friend of the podcast, and he helps sort it out. Segment: Healthcare is shaping up to be a key issue in 2020. Now is a good time to be sure we understand the terminology and how the candidates differ. Carrie Chapman is an attorney for the Legal Council for Health Justice, and she joins the podcast for a little Healthcare 101.
On the third episode of TomHanksgiving, Lally Gartel Tkeshelashvili (@tamizdatum) joins Andy and Adam to discuss Philadelphia. She brings her expertise on HIV/AIDS discrimination law and the workings of the US criminal justice system. Learn more about her work at Legal Council for Health Justice: https://legalcouncil.org/
The National Forum on the Legal Profession has welcomed the new South African Legal Practice Council which comes into effect in November this year. The Council will regulate all lawyers and advocates and will replace the four societies across the country. Jutice minister Michael Masutha says the process for nominating members to serve on the council open tonight. Deputy Chairperson of the National Forum on the Legal Profession, Max Boqwana says this body will look after the interests of the public and not those of lawyers.
We continue our conversation on the Waivers and begin to touch on Managed Care. Carrie Chapman, who is with Legal Council for Health Justice in Chicago, and is one of 3 attorneys litigating the Waiver-based cases, joins us and describes what’s happening in these cases right now. We’ll also ask her about advocacy from a legal perspective and what that might mean for those of you not in Illinois. If you would like to contact Carrie to discuss the two cases or to talk about your Illinois legislator, you can reach her at: Caroline Chapman, Director of Policy, Advocacy, and Strategic Innovation Legal Council for Health Justice 17 N. State, Suite 900 Chicago, IL 60602 cchapman@legalcouncil.org (312) 605-1981 www.legalcouncil.org | @thelegalcouncil (Twitter)
Tom and Dan talk about how much attention to give the presidents tweets and rallies and why Murkowski and Collins are keeping their cards close to their chest. This week on the Podcast, Anthony Clark comes on to talk about being the director of Suburban Unity Alliance, Brand New Congress, the fight for 15, how to stop gun violence, and why he decided to run for Congress in the 7th District. Carrie Chapman, Director of Policy Advocacy and Strategic Innovation, Legal Council for Health Justice comes back on the podcast to talk about Graham-Cassidy Health Care bill, why it has problems and reminds us that we cannot give up the fight. Send your stories to GCHcomments@finance.senate.gov
This week’s podcast is dedicated to health care. Dan tells his personal story about being on the Affordable Care Act and how he uses the Amplify App to contact his representatives. You can get the details here: https://www.indivisiblechicago.com/amplify Dan connected with Senator Tammy Duckworth to ask her what she was going to do to stand up against the ACA repeal. Carrie Chapman, Director of Policy at Legal Council for Health Justice, goes deep into how dependent Illinois is on the health care act and describes the far-reaching ramifications of its repeal. Scott Cross tells us all about the Illinois Health Care Truth Tour—a mobile billboard will be at events around the state to hold Republican reps accountable for their vote for the AHCA and against their constituents. The bill is so bad even Trump thinks it’s mean. Tell your friends to donate to the project at the following link: https://secure.actblue.com/donate/signsforsellouts
Josh returns in this episode to discuss past shows and the law. From there the trio go to the news and they work in some email as well. Join them in helping you waste time in the most entertaining way possible. Follow us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/losthourspodcast Follow us on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/losthrscast Follow us on Instagram: lost_hours
The House passed two bills this week designed to prevent regulation enforcement; one prevents environmental reviews on certain hydro-power projects, the other prevents the National Labor Relations Board from functioning at all. A small conduit hydroelectic project[/caption] Links to Information in this Podcast Song: We've Got Balls by Robin and the Giant (downloaded from Music Alley) Text of the bill: H.R. 678: "The Bureau of Reclamation Small Conduit Hydropower Development and Rural Jobs Act" Congressional Dish summary of H.R. 678 Bureau of Reclamation report and maps of potential projects in 13 states Bill passed with only 15 House members either voting against it or not voting at all. Song: Work Til You Die by The Undercover Hippie (downloaded from Music Alley) Text of the bill: H.R. 1120: “Preventing Greater Uncertainty in Labor-Management Relations Act” Congressional Dish summary of H.R. 1120 Video from the H.R. 1120 mark-up hearing in the House Education and Workforce Committee What is the National Labor Relations Board? Office of Legal Council memo saying President Obama's recess appointments are legal U.S. Court of Appeals rules President Obama's recess appointments were unconstitutional Representatives quoted in this episode: Scott Tipton (CO-3) Grace Napolitano (CA-32) Tom McClintock (CA-4) John Kline (MN-2) Tim Bishop (NY-1) Rob Andrews (NJ-1)