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Book Reviews
A
Concise Guide to Successful Employment Practices, 3rd Ed.
By J.D. Thorne (Riverwoods, IL: CCH Inc., 2000). 508 pgs.
$49.95. Order, (800) 248-3248.
Reviewed by Theodore D. Kafkas
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This book is a practical guide to legal and management employment concepts.
While the critical analysis and tone are written from an employer's viewpoint,
the book's underlying information could be useful to the employee side of
the equation. The book's numerous topics take the reader through the entire
employment relationship from hiring to termination. It provides employee
handbook suggestions, tackles wage and hour laws, discerns prudent supervisory
techniques, dissects unemployment compensation claims, addresses equal employment
opportunity law challenges, examines how to avoid unions, and discusses
how to comply with a myriad of regulations. Throughout the book, Thorne
discusses how to avoid many possible legal penalties and high damages in
a persuasive, cost-versus-benefit approach. The book provides expert and
practical techniques for employers to efficiently manage employees, avoid
courts and, if necessary, win cases.
The book's accessible style increases its usefulness to readers. The
book includes a full table of contents, interesting statistics, helpful
forms, suggested auditing approaches, excellent samples, analytical guidelines,
tips that reflect the author's years of experience, valuable checklists,
and an index.
The book also would be useful for students. The tests at the beginning
of each chapter (answers are at the end of each chapter) make this book
a great learning tool.
Thorne packed a lot of useful information and analysis into this book.
However, the author seems rushed in a few areas and completely devoted
in others. This book also has some errors, most of which are only typographical,
but there are some confusing passages. While this third edition is mostly
well organized, the author could rearrange chapters and refine some areas.
For instance, one example is repeated almost word-for-word in two different
chapters. In addition, most unfortunately, this book is rife with a lack
of citations for quotes and many cases to which the author refers. This
annoying lack of citations detracts from the book's usefulness as a resource.
When the author is focused, he takes absolute flight and is enjoyable
to read. If the book provided all citations and was better edited, it
would improve from very good to excellent. Still, the book is worth reading.
Theodore D. Kafkas,
Marquette 1990, is a sole practitioner in Milwaukee. He has a BBA
suma cum laude, U.W.-Milwaukee.
Asset
Protection Planning Guide
By Barry S. Engel, David L. Lockwood, & Mark Merric (Riverwoods,
IL: CCH Inc., 2001). 660 pgs. $99. Order, (800) 248-3248.
Reviewed by Stephanie G. Rapkin
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The premise in the Asset Protection Planning Guide: A State-of-the-Art Approach
to Integrated Estate Planning is that all estate planning clients, not just
the mega-wealthy, need asset protection as part of an integrated approach
to estate planning. The failure to do so may even be grounds for a malpractice
action against the estate planner. The book lays out the reasons why this
premise is necessary in a very thorough and compelling manner.
Retirement plans and various types of insurance don't always provide
the necessary type of protection or coverage. The loopholes found in insurance
policies are examined in one chapter, as is the real lack of protection
afforded to retirement plans.
While there is no one right way to design a plan, there are many wrong
ways, including outright fraud. Practitioners must consider the various
tools and techniques available and how much protection each method or
combination of methods offer. The authors discuss various court decisions,
examining in detail why and how the court was able to pierce the asset
protection veil.
Barry Engel has created a ladder of asset protection vehicles and assigned
values to the various techniques. Each method is examined in detail and
the pros and cons of each are assessed in 10 of the 17 chapters. While
some of the techniques are rather simple and others are extremely complex,
the book lays out in a readable manner how each works, as well as its
benefits and determents.
Also included is a full discussion of fraudulent transfers and ethical
considerations for the attorney. Comments and planning notes assist the
reader in determining an appropriate course of action. The authors never
encourage the client or the planner to engage in fraudulent transactions
or unethical behavior. The authors include an affidavit they use in their
practice before engaging in asset protection matters with their clients.
The appendix provides all the practice tools an attorney might use on
a regular basis when dealing with asset protection. It includes the reprinted
law, sample agreements of both substantive and procedural matters, and
charts comparing and contrasting how the techniques work in various jurisdictions.
While a considerable amount of research has gone into this book, it is
not a dry and boring treatise. The authorities for the propositions and
law cited are documented; however, the text is a practical guideline and
suggestion manual with significant amounts of practice material incorporated
into each section and the appendix.
Stephanie G. Rapkin,
California Western 1982, maintains a law office in Mequon.
Consumer
Culture & TV Programming
By Robin K. Andersen (Boulder CO:, Westview Press, 2000). 320
pgs. $28. Order, (303) 444-3541.
Reviewed by Timothy McAllister
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In many ways we have returned to the golden days of television - gold rules
what is available for programming. In the early years of television, corporate
sponsors directly chose program content and monopolized a show's advertising.
Under today's more modern system, the willingness of corporations to sponsor
a TV show can mean life or death for the program.
The blending of TV entertainment and corporate advertising structure
has led to "commercialtainment," where programs and product reinforcement
are one. "Complementary copy" in print journalism refers to the adjacent
placement of articles and reinforcing advertisement for products. The
same happens on TV; examples abound of actors referring to real products
during a program, resulting in additional realism and enhanced, almost
subliminal, product reinforcement. Corporations carefully choose the programs
and situations in which to place their products, thus manipulating program
content as the networks seek to maximize commercial value and profits.
This blending also takes place in news programming, when corporations
provide "video news releases" to TV stations to fill news broadcasts.
For example, if a local station has a week-long series on its evening
news about depression or some other ailment, it is likely that most of
the "story" and footage were provided by a pharmaceutical corporation,
which indirectly promotes its products through consumer awareness.
Robin Andersen, in Consumer Culture & TV Programming, does an excellent
job of delving into the manipulative mechanics of what is probably the
most potent medium ever used by corporate structures and others.
Through the use of techniques such as focus groups, the psyches of consumers
and voters are probed to find the emotional resonance points to develop
more effective advertisements. Soothing short-term anxiety, viewer-consumers
are convinced that there is little difference between having and being.
Advertising promises emotional well-being and satisfaction, and consumers
are willing to accept these promises rather than face their own social
and psychological problems.
The tension between the promised and the received yields perpetual layers
of illusion. "Lifestyle advertising" makes it possible, and acceptable,
to be a member of a nonconformist group of individuals who identify their
nonconformist members through similar consumer and cultural consumption.
In-depth chapters dealing with the pop psychotherapy available through
talk shows, the manipulation of social agendas through "reality" programming,
and the influences of both of these techniques on politics round off a
well-written and thought-provoking work. Andersen's ability to flow from
casual discussion to detailed social science analysis is a rare treat.
I recommend reading this book before watching that next television show.
Timothy McAllister,
UW-Oshkosh 1998 MPA, is an offender classification specialist for
the Wisconsin Department of Corrections.
Managing
Partner 101: A Guide to Successful Law Firm Leadership, 2d Ed.
By Lawrence G. Green (Chicago, IL: ABA Law Practice Management
Section, 2001). 126 pgs. $39.95. Order, (800) 285-2221.
Reviewed by Michael L. Winkelman
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Http://www.dictionary.com defines a hornbook as "a text that instructs
in the basic skills or rudiments of a subject." This is your hornbook
for new managing partners.
With a premise that the managing partner is the CEO of the firm, the
author lists the numerous managing partner responsibilities, while noting
that a managing partner also acts as the firm's representative at important
events.
The author, at one time a managing partner himself, states that a managing
partner will use many methods of leading the firm, but appears to favor
leadership by example. The author used an open management style, with
an open door policy, walking the halls and speaking with individuals in
the firm. The qualities of a managing partner are detailed with 11 attributes,
including humor. Green recommends carrying a notebook with personnel,
calendar, and to-do information.
While firm organization, coordination, rules, and policies fall high
on the managing partner's responsibility list, information technology
(IT) is recognized as a critical component within a firm. A diverse-member
computer committee should deal with hardware and software issues, and
advise the managing partner about policies regarding use, training, feedback,
security, contingency/back-up, telecommuting, and ethics of IT use by
the firm employees and partners.
In the human resources area, Green suggests implementing a Code of Interpersonal
Conduct, if necessary, to manage interaction between staff and lawyers,
and possibly also a Client's Bill of Rights, to define the relationship
between the firm and its clients.
This book is a short read, contains a good basic outline of managing
partner responsibilities, and functions well as a reference. At the very
least, a reader can use the book for comparison to an existing managing
partner job description and responsibilities. While this is not intended
to be a complete managing partner handbook (the listed ABA references
are helpful), it would be beneficial if the next version included some
additional real life examples, tips, policies, rules and procedures, and
specific references within the context of the book.
This book and its four cornerstones for a successful law practice - 1)
provide clients with a quality legal product and quality service within
its expertise area; 2) provide lawyers and staff with a healthy working
environment; 3) adhere to high standards in both legal and business ethics;
and 4) be financially sound - will help any new managing partner be a
successful managing partner.
Michael L. Winkelman,
Loyola 1982, focuses on intellectual property and business law from
his Appleton office.
To
Review a Book...
The following books are available for review.
Please request the book and writing guidelines from Karlé Lester
at the State Bar of Wisconsin, P.O. Box 7158, Madison, WI 53707-7158,
(608) 250-6127, klester@wisbar.org.
- Compensation Plans for Law Firms (3d ed.), edited
by James D. Cotterman (Chicago, IL: ABA Law Practice Management
Section, 2001). 140 pgs.
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To Look Like America: Dismantling Barriers for Women and
Minorities in Government, by Katherine C. Naff (Boulder,
CO: Westview Press, 2001). 284 pgs.
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Making Sense of the ASFA Regulations: A Roadmap for Effective
Implementation, edited by Diane Boyd Rauber (Washington,
DC: ABA Center on Children and the Law, 2001). 279 pgs.
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Making Work Work for You,by Gary A. Hengstler
(Chicago, IL: ABA Career Resource Center, 2001). 78 pgs.
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Making Your Record: Courtroom Guidebook for Attorneys and
Law Students, by Leticia Araujo Perez (Notre Dame, IN:
National Institute for Trial Advocacy, 2001). 126 pgs.
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