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ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network

ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network

Legal Talk Network

Listen to the ABA Journal Podcasts for analysis and discussion of the latest legal issues and trends. Podcasts include ABA Modern Law Library and ABA Asked and Answered, brought to you by Legal Talk Network.
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Top 10 ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network Episodes

Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network - 'Police & the Empire City' explores race and the origins of the NYPD
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02/14/24 • 47 min

In Police & the Empire City: Race & the Origins of Modern Policing, Matthew Guariglia looks at the New York City police from their founding in 1845 through the 1930s as “police transitioned from a more informal collection of pugilists clad in wool coats to what we can recognize today as a modern professionalized police department.”

From the beginning, race and ethnicity had a major impact in the policing of New York City. In a city where the top echelons of power were held by Anglo-Dutch Protestants, the streets were patrolled by Irish and German immigrant police officers, sometimes enforcing the Fugitive Slave Act by snatching Black people off the streets and sending them back to enslavement in the South.

In this episode of the Modern Law Library, Guariglia and the ABA Journal’s Lee Rawles discuss what the early period of policing in New York City can tell us about policing today. Rawles shares her own ancestor’s path from immigrant to police court judge on the West Side of Chicago (though the dates she cites in the interview are incorrect–Michael J. O’Donoghue emigrated from Ireland in the 1874 and was appointed to the police court in 1901.)

For Irish and German immigrants, a job on the police force was a path out of poverty and towards whiteness and political power, but you would be asked to prove yourself by visiting violence on your own community. African American community leaders hoped the appointment of Black policemen would curb police brutality, but the city was slower than other metropolises like Chicago, who hired James L. Shelton as the city’s first Black officer in 1871. Samuel Battle became the NYPD’s first Black police officer in 1911, eventually rising to the rank of lieutenant and being appointed a parole commissioner.

Meanwhile, in neighborhoods like Chinatown, entire communities went without police officers who spoke the same language as inhabitants. The first Chinese-speaking officer was hired in 1904. That same year, the General Slocum disaster sent the city administration scrambling for German-speaking police officers to locate relatives in Kleindeutschland to identify bodies of the thousand victims of the burned shipwreck. Fears of “the Black Hand” led to the creation of the Italian Squad, and Guariglia shares the story of how the Italian Squad’s founder, Joseph Petrosino, ended up assassinated while on assignment in Sicily.

“Empire City” is an apt name for New York City, as it had international reach and drew on former colonial administrators. One influential police commissioner, Gen. Francis Vinton Greene, had been involved in the U.S. occupation of the Philippines after the Spanish-American War. Tactics first used to subjugate colonists were put to use in the city. As the Progressive Era led to a preoccupation with eugenics, the New York City police were involved in international conversations about the characteristics of criminals and race science. The idea of molding the perfect police officers also caught hold. In this episode, Guariglia shares how the police departments decided they had to teach their officers how to stand and chew properly.

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ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network - ABA Journal: Modern Law Library : How the Great Recession changed American law firms
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07/10/19 • 27 min

There’s no denying that law firms have gone through significant changes in the last decade. These changes continue to create unprecedented challenges for modern law firms today. So, what’s next? Randy Kiser, author of American Law Firms in Transition: Trends, Threads, and Strategies, pinpoints why the Great Recession of 2008 marked a defining moment for law firms and how the economic shift transformed the legal services landscape. In this episode of the Modern Law Library, ABA Publishing’s Olivia Aguilar speaks to Kiser about the impact of the recession on law firms, why law firm culture is crucial in today’s world and what lawyers have in common with the Pirahã tribe in Brazil.

Special thanks to our sponsor, Headnote.

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As electronic data became more prevalent in the 1990s, Judge Andrew Peck, an ABA Journal Legal Rebels Trailblazer, wrote a line that would be quoted by judges and lawyers for generations to come. “It is black-letter law that computerized data is discoverable if relevant,” he wrote in Anti-Monopoly Inc. v. Hasbro Inc. It was one of Peck’s earliest decisions from the bench. In this episode of the Legal Rebels Podcast, Peck discusses his career and the technological changes he experienced with the ABA Journal’s Victor Li.

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ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network - This year's historic ABA Techshow will be bigger than ever

This year's historic ABA Techshow will be bigger than ever

ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network

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03/12/25 • 33 min

For one thing, it marks the 40th annual iteration of the show. For another, it promises to be the biggest of all time—emanating for the first time from the McCormick Place Convention Center in Chicago. Techshow co-chair Stephen Embry talks to the ABA Journal’s Victor Li about what to expect from this year’s show.

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ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network - What generative AI means for the future of predictive analytics
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11/13/24 • 39 min

Lawyers, especially litigators, like to say they never ask a question that they don’t already know the answer to. But there’s plenty of unknowns out there—especially when it comes to how a case might turn out or how much it will cost. Predictive judicial and law firm analytics take some of that guesswork out of the equation.

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ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network - How is the true crime genre impacting the way people think about innocence?
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11/22/23 • 57 min

Human beings have told stories about violence and victims from our earliest records. In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, newspapers and magazines flourished on crime coverage. Hollywood has churned out crime movies and TV shows, based both in fiction and non-fiction. But after the incredible success experienced by the podcast Serial in 2014 and the documentary series Making a Murderer in 2015, a new wave of popular media exploring real cases of potential wrongful convictions burst upon the scene.

While Diana Rickard didn’t consider herself a “podcast person,” her interest as an academic was piqued. The criminology professor began listening to Serial, and became fascinated by what she saw as a new expression of the true crime genre, dubbing it the “New True.”

“These series deserve our attention for what they reveal about our societal understanding of crime and punishment,” Rickard writes in her book The New True Crime: How the Rise of Serialized Storytelling Is Transforming Innocence. “Through them, audiences are receiving ideological messages about punishment. They are also sites where inequality, power and racism are openly examined, playing a role in our public conversations about who is and is not deserving of punishment and who is and is not protected by law. In addition, by using the term ‘New True,’ I am also suggesting these series indicate a new way of constructing truth itself. Questioning the finality of verdicts, framing facts as in the eye of the beholder, the new series unmoor our faith in what is knowable.”

In this episode of the Modern Law Library, Rickard explains how she sees the New True podcasts and documentary series as differing from older media. She and the ABA Journal’s Lee Rawles discuss the differences between crime reporting and this serialized storytelling, and whether the New True series are managing to avoid some of the ethical pitfalls of traditional crime reporting. They also delve into whether debunking things like flawed forensic science or false confessions for the general public may have shifted the way people think about wrongful convictions.

Rickard shares what she has heard from legal experts in the innocence community about the benefits—and drawbacks—of cases catching the eyes of New True producers. She also reveals what surprised her most when she researched the Reddit communities that gather to discuss New True cases.

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ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network - ABA Journal: Legal Rebels : Judge Dixon stays on to keep bringing tech to courts
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01/11/17 • 30 min

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FAQ

How many episodes does ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network have?

ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network currently has 405 episodes available.

What topics does ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network cover?

The podcast is about Non-Profit, Podcasts, Business and Careers.

What is the most popular episode on ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network?

The episode title 'ABA Journal: Asked and Answered : How to practice law remotely and efficiently during the COVID-19 crisis' is the most popular.

What is the average episode length on ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network?

The average episode length on ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network is 33 minutes.

How often are episodes of ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network released?

Episodes of ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network are typically released every 7 days.

When was the first episode of ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network?

The first episode of ABA Journal Podcasts - Legal Talk Network was released on Sep 26, 2016.

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