The legal industry is more exciting and dynamic than ever, with technology bringing about rapid change in the practice of law as well as new opportunities.
Change and opportunity are flip sides of a coin. The best way to adapt to change is to be positioned for the opportunities it produces.
Grads can often bypass lower value roles and move straight into the more interesting work they’ve been freed to do—practice law.
How can you keep pace with the changes and chart your professional development to remain relevant and competitive in the current environment and that of tomorrow?
Mentorship in the legal profession provides you a sense of collegiality, expectation of professionalism, and gives you a first look into how the profession runs.
The mindfulness revolution is here. It is helping all sorts of professionals. And it can help lawyers too.
BTI is an insightful legal industry consulting and research firm that predominantly covers US clients. As a Canadian firm, Osler is thrilled to be recognized for the quality of its associates.
Osler’s National Co-Chairman, Shahir Guindi, along with other respected peers, speak on a panel at McGill about the future of legal education.
Osler’s Robert Yalden named the inaugural Stephen Sigurdson Professor in Corporate Law and Finance at Queen’s University.
Former Osler lawyer and U of T Alumnus, Norman Loveland and his wife, Gay, donate $1 million for student bursaries.
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