United States:
Design Thinking For Litigators
02 July 2019
Stites & Harbison PLLC
To print this article, all you need is to be registered or login on Mondaq.com.
Design thinking is considered by its adherents to be a
"systematic approach to innovation and problem solving that
is, fundamentally: user centered, experimental, responsive,
intentional, and tolerant of failure." The Harvard Business
Review framed design thinking as a kind of social technology which
by "shaping the experiences of the innovators, and of their
key stakeholders and implementers, at every step."2 Design
thinking has been used by engineers and architects for decades, and
has more recently been adopted in fields like business and health
care. It has not yet caught on in the legal profession, which is
typically slower to innovate.
Click here to read
this entire article.
The content of this article is intended to provide a general
guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought
about your specific circumstances.
POPULAR ARTICLES ON: Consumer Protection from United States
Dark Chocolate And Heavy Metals
Holland & Knight
In December 2022, Consumer Reports published a study on lead and cadmium in dark chocolate. Dark chocolate came into vogue when studies showed antioxidants in it may have health benefits.
FTC Updates (April 8 – April 12, 2024)
Crowell & Moring LLP
The FTC kept busy through the week of the ABA Antitrust Spring Meeting including an appearance by Chair Lina Khan at the Spring Meeting on an antitrust enforcement panel.
No Asbestos In Cosmetic Talc Products Says FDA
Duane Morris LLP
On April 5, 2024 the US Food and Drug Administration confirmed that its third-party testing of cosmetic talc products for 2023 identified no traces of asbestos in any of the 50 cosmetic samples tested.