Let’s Start at the Very Beginning: Delaware Supreme Court Reaffirms That Consideration for Restrictive Covenants Is Measured at Contract Formation, Not Time of Enforcement

On February 3, 2026, the Delaware Supreme Court issued a short but highly anticipated order in North American Fire Ultimate Holdings, LP v. Doorly, reversing the Chancery Court’s dismissal of contract claims seeking to enforce restrictive covenants against a former senior executive. The decision clarifies that the existence of consideration supporting restrictive covenants must be evaluated at the time the parties enter into their agreement—not at the time of an alleged…

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Continue ReadingLet’s Start at the Very Beginning: Delaware Supreme Court Reaffirms That Consideration for Restrictive Covenants Is Measured at Contract Formation, Not Time of Enforcement

Activism proves a stimulating topic at Sheldonian Series event

'The Power of Activism' delivered a stimulating evening of discussion as the theme for this term's Sheldonian Series event on Wednesday 4 February 2026.It was a brilliant evening of discussion and a lively crowdDominique PalmerThe event, which is open to all and aims to promote freedom of speech and inclusive inquiry, saw a robust exchange of views on themes including the relationship between democracy and activism, the ethical and legal limits…

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Military Operation Against Iran: A Realistic Scenario?

The concentration of US military forces in the Persian Gulf has sparked discussions about the possibility of a new military operation against Iran. International relations are difficult to predict. However, the development of the situation can be viewed as a set of alternative scenarios. A military operation is one of them. A number of arguments can be made in favour of a military scenario being likely. First of all, the…

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Now Available! Washington Peculiarities: An Employer’s Guide to Labor & Employment Laws in the Evergreen State (2026 Edition)

Seyfarth is pleased to announce the release of the second edition of Washington Peculiarities: An Employer's Guide to Labor & Employment Laws in the Evergreen State. Authored by Labor & Employment attorneys in the firm's Seattle office, this book provides a high-level overview of employment laws in Washington and includes laws that went into effect on January 1, 2026. Click HERE to request an electronic copy of the publication. If you should…

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Continue ReadingNow Available! Washington Peculiarities: An Employer’s Guide to Labor & Employment Laws in the Evergreen State (2026 Edition)

California Legislature Declines to Create New Private Right of Action to Recover Unpaid Wages

Quick Hits On February 2, 2026, the California Legislature declined to pass legislation (SB 310) that would have allowed employees to directly sue for unpaid wages under section 210, maintaining the current enforcement avenues through the labor commissioner or PAGA. SB 310 aimed to address delays and limited recoveries in existing processes by proposing a new civil action route for employees, but it failed to pass, leaving the current penalty…

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A seismic trade shift from the Alps to the Himalayas

Some tropes should be retired because they’ve become hackneyed clichés. Others should be set aside because they are almost always inapposite. Then there is the “Mother of All” trope – risible when it was first uttered; tragic given the consequences; and ridiculous in the light of what happened to its progenitor. And yet, against all logical odds and historical sense, it persists. So it was that European Commission President Ursula…

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Continue ReadingA seismic trade shift from the Alps to the Himalayas

Trump Shouts Loudly and Fumbles a Big Stick

This commentary originally appeared in Time. The views expressed are the author’s own.President Theodore Roosevelt referred to the presidency as a “bully pulpit,” which could be used to persuade legislators to embrace his sweeping policy agenda, from environmental legislation to antitrust protections. To Roosevelt, the word “bully” meant “superb” or “excellent.” Today, the term has taken another meaning. President Donald Trump bullies through coercion, threats, and retribution to serve his…

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Seyfarth Names Suzanna Bonham as Managing Partner in Houston

February 3, 2026 – Seyfarth Shaw LLP has named Suzanna Bonham managing partner of the firm’s Houston office, marking an exciting new chapter for Seyfarth in Texas. Bonham, who joined Seyfarth in 2013, brings more than two decades of leadership experience as a litigator, strategist, and trusted advisor to clients and firm leadership alike. Bonham has built a formidable reputation both in the Houston market and across Texas. She is a…

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Pay Attention or Pay Up: A Costly Lesson in New Jersey Paid Sick Leave Noncompliance

Quick Hits Noncompliance with New Jersey’s Earned Sick Leave Law’s recordkeeping requirements creates a presumption that an employer failed to provide the earned sick leave required by the law. Vacation/PTO policies relied upon by employers to comply with the ESLL must provide paid leave for all purposes required by the ESLL. Failure to provide earned sick leave constitutes failure to pay wages under NJWHL, subjecting employers to claims for liquidated…

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Rent, repudiation, and re-leasing: The February 18 SCC hearing that could shift Canadian leasing leverage

On Feb. 18, 2026, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) will hear Aphria Inc. v. Canada Life Assurance Company, et al. The issue before the SCC sits at the intersection of commercial leasing doctrine and mainstream contract law: when a tenant repudiates a commercial lease and vacates, can the landlord “do nothing,” keep the lease alive, and sue for rent as it falls due without any duty to mitigate? We…

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Continue ReadingRent, repudiation, and re-leasing: The February 18 SCC hearing that could shift Canadian leasing leverage

New research reveals ‘postcode lottery’ for second trimester baby loss

The care that women receive following a miscarriage during the second trimester of pregnancy varies according to where in the UK and Ireland the woman is treated, new research shows.The study, led by the University of Aberdeen in collaboration with colleagues from the University of Manchester, University College Cork and University of Birmingham, was funded by Tommy’s, the pregnancy and baby charity, and published in The European Journal of Obstetrics…

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2025 Year in Review / 2026 Look Forward – Hong Kong Employment Law

The year 2025 has seen significant developments in employment law in Hong Kong. This article provides a quick glance at the major changes introduced during the year and offers insights into anticipated changes as we transition further into 2026. To read more about all the key updates, please click here for the full version of this article. January: Six visa categories move to online-only applications. Click here to read more.…

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As Flu Season Surges, Fourth Circuit Offers Guidance on Vaccine Mandate Litigation

Quick Hits The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reiterated that a low bar exists for asserting a religious discrimination claim at the pleading stage of a Title VII case. The court held it was not a violation of the ADA for an employer to ask about an employee’s vaccination status. An employee’s vaccination status does not support a “regarded as” disabled claim under the ADA in the…

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Continue ReadingAs Flu Season Surges, Fourth Circuit Offers Guidance on Vaccine Mandate Litigation

Are returning pumas putting Patagonian penguins at risk? New study reveals the likelihood

An adult puma with a blood stain on the paw. © Joel Reyero 2024 Should we protect an emblematic species if it may come at the cost of another one – particularly in ecosystems that are still recovering from human impacts? This is the conservation dilemma facing Monte Leon National Park, on the Patagonian coast in Argentina.Since cattle ranching was abandoned in southern Argentina in 1990, pumas (Puma concolor) have…

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New analysis of Deep Maniot Greeks reveals a unique genetic time capsule in the Balkans

Our study demonstrates how geography, social organisation, and historical circumstances can preserve ancient genetic patterns in certain regions long after they have become altered elsewhere.Lead author, Associate Researcher Dr Leonidas-Romanos Davranoglou (Oxford University Museum of Natural History)Set among rugged mountains, dramatic coastlines, and distinct stone tower houses, the Mani Peninsula of the Peloponnese, Greece, has long captivated travellers, historians, and writers, most famously, Jules Verne and Sir Patrick Leigh Fermor.…

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A Machine-Learning Model Can Help Reunite Long-Separated Families

Around the world, millions of families have suffered forcible separation, through war, trafficking, natural disasters, or socioeconomic crises. In China, family separation is a particularly large-scale and far-reaching problem. Following the enactment of country’s One Child Policy in 1979, many children were abandoned or trafficked and then adopted either domestically or internationally.Reuniting children taken from their parents is a logistical challenge. China has established a DNA biobank dedicated to facilitating…

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Robert Wachter: AI Is Already Remaking Healthcare

Transcript Harlan Krumholz: Welcome to Health & Veritas. We have a special bonus podcast today. Our guest is Dr. Robert Wachter who’s here to talk about his new book, A Giant Leap: How AI is Transforming Healthcare and What That Means for Our Future. It’s being published today, and we’re dropping this podcast. We recorded it a little while ago, but we were holding it for this special day. I’m…

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New project aims to build the foundations of a quantum internet

By fostering deep integration between leading UK and Japanese teams and their respective programmes, we aim to create a coherent, full-stack architecture and deliver concrete integration outcomes that amplify the value of current national efforts, rather than duplicating foundational developments.Professor David Lucas, Department of Physics, University of OxfordInstead of working through problems step by step, quantum methods can explore many possibilities at the same time, making them much faster at certain…

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Greater Eurasia and its Western Neighbours

But American control over Europe growing stronger is a good thing too—it drives up the value of Europe as a territorial base for America to deploy its military in Eurasia. And this means, from a tactical perspective, that the Americans are more likely to force Europe into granting Russia concessions than to throw the continent under the bus of direct military confrontation. Especially since America’s obviously decreasing ability to act…

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Washington State Seeks Input on New Excavation, Trenching, and Shoring Work Plan Rules

Quick Hits Washington’s Division of Occupational Safety and Health has moved to amend excavation, trenching, and shoring rules, with a focus on general protection requirements. The proposal would require employers to complete a written work plan for any trench excavation that requires a protective system and require a “competent person” to remain onsite any time trenching and evacuation work is being performed. Washington Department of Labor & Industries is holding…

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Time Waits for No One

The problem is that such a strategy requires courage and at least a modicum of wisdom. Alas, there is no certainty that all global elites possess these qualities.  The difficulty is that as elements of the new world system develop, the rules of the old one are being erased, disappearing, melting away. Yet here we are talking about a historical process, not a volcanic eruption. All of history is moulded…

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Clarification From Germany’s Federal Labor Court: 3rd League Soccer Referees Are Not Employees

Quick Hits Germany’s Federal Labor Court (BAG) ruled that third-division soccer referees are not employees, reversing the Cologne Regional Labor Court’s decision and determining that the legal dispute should be heard in civil courts. The BAG found that the framework agreement and actual constraints on referees did not establish an employer’s right to issue instructions typical of an employment contract, emphasizing the freelance nature of the referees’ work. The decision…

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Continue ReadingClarification From Germany’s Federal Labor Court: 3rd League Soccer Referees Are Not Employees

Three Takeaways From the NLRB’s FY 2025 Petition Statistics

Quick Hits In FY 2025, union election petitions filed by employees decreased to 2,100, marking the lowest number since 2022, yet still surpassing the first two years of the Biden administration. Unions achieved a high win percentage of 81.9 percent in representation elections, though the percentage reflected a slight decline from the previous year. Employer petitions dropped to 237, but employer petitions have been significantly higher since the NLRB’s 2023…

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Washington HB 2191 Update (Jan. 28, 2026): Key Changes and Contractor Next Steps

Earlier this month, we analyzed House Bill 2191, the proposed legislation that would significantly expand wage and benefit liability in Washington’s construction industry. On January 28, 2026, lawmakers released a substitute version of the bill (HB 2191‑S) that makes several important changes. Although the substitute preserves the bill’s core objective—expanded accountability for unpaid wages and benefits—it narrows and clarifies key provisions that raised concerns for general contractors and project owners.…

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Maine Will Launch PFML Benefits in May 2026

Quick Hits The Maine Department of Labor recently confirmed that benefit distributions will begin on May 1, 2026, for the PFML program. Both employers and employees contribute to the paid family and medical leave fund. Covered workers will be entitled to take twelve weeks of paid time off for family leave, medical leave, leave to deal with the transition of a family member’s military deployment, or leave to stay safe…

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Under the needle: Navigating legal risks in the medispa sector

Recent media investigations into the practices of medispas, beauty clinics, and other health and wellness services in Ontario underscore the need for healthcare providers and business owners to have robust quality and safety controls in place to ensure the wellbeing of their clients and to minimize regulatory and other legal repercussions. As the health and wellness space becomes increasingly popular, resulting in increased demand for services and new opportunities for…

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Gorton and Denton byelection: Reform could benefit from split vote on the left

A byelection has been set for February 26 in the Manchester constituency of Gorton and Denton. This will be a big test for Keir Starmer’s Labour party and a temperature check on the state of multi-party politics in the North. Although Labour won the seat comfortably in 2024, some early polls are already suggesting Reform could win.Byelections are awkward beasts and don’t necessarily follow the usual rules. What makes things…

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America for the Strong: Venezuela, the Monroe Doctrine, and the Fracturing of the World Order

Introduction: the return of an old logic The capture of Nicolás Maduro by United States forces is not merely another episode in Venezuela’s prolonged crisis. It is a geopolitical event with continental and global implications. It marks the explicit return of military intervention as a legitimate instrument of hemispheric order, the reactivation of the Monroe Doctrine as operational practice, and a visible fracture in the post–Cold War international system. What…

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Expert Comment: Computers can help us to do science, but they can’t understand it for us

Dr Héloïse Stevance. Credit: Elise Manahan. Recently one of the most prestigious artificial intelligence (AI) conferences (NeurIPS) was caught accepting submissions with hallucinated citations. Not a handful either - over 100 instances. The response form the NeurIPS board is pretty telling of the times we live in: ‘Even if 1.1% of the papers have one or more incorrect references due to the use of LLMs, the content of the papers themselves are…

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Maine Enacts Law Requiring Employers to Notify Employees About Surveillance Tools

Quick Hits Maine recently enacted a law requiring employers to notify employees and job applicants about employee surveillance. The law does not apply to cameras used in the workplace for safety and security purposes. The law took effect immediately without the governor’s signature. In recent years, more employers have begun using technology to track employee movements and actions. This may include cameras in the workplace, GPS tracking on phones and…

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The University of Manchester’s first female physics academic retires after four decades of research and teaching

Professor Philippa Browning, The University of Manchester’s first female physics academic, is retiring this week after more than 40 years of research, teaching and service at the University. Her achievement have also recently been marked by the award of the 2026 Hannes Alfven Medal by the European Physical Society, a prestigious international distinction recognising her “outstanding and innovative work bridging astrophysical and laboratory plasmas using analytical insights and modelling.”Professor Browning joined…

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Seyfarth Earns High Rankings in 2026 World Trademark Review 1000

Seyfarth’s Trademark practice earned widespread recognition in the 2026 edition of the World Trademark Review 1000, a guide that spotlights “leading professionals and firms that are deemed outstanding at obtaining, protecting, managing, enforcing and monetising trademarks." "With trademark capabilities spanning over 190 countries, Seyfarth Shaw delivers consistently high-impact results through a collaborative, tech-enabled infrastructure," WTR wrote of the firm. The firm earned high rankings nationally as well as in the…

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Sexual Harassment Case Ends in $5.5 Million Verdict

Quick Hits A jury in federal court recently awarded a former employee $5.5 million in her sexual harassment and retaliation case. A female security guard alleged that her boss sexually harassed and assaulted her, and that the company ended her employment after she complained to the company’s owner. Anti-harassment provisions in federal, state, and local laws may vary in scope and application. Background A former security guard sued C&M Defense…

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Ontario moves ahead on subsea Toronto Third Line

On Jan.7, 2026, the Ministry of Energy and Mines released a proposal (ERO 026-0019) to bring forward an order in council and Minister’s directive pursuant to Section 25.32 of the Electricity Act, 1998 that would direct the Independent Electricity System Operator’s (IESO) to undertake a competitive procurement process and enter into a procurement contract with a transmitter to develop and construct the Toronto Third Line project with an in-service date…

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University of Manchester mathematicians appointed as Fellows of new National Academy

Four researchers from the Faculty of Science and Engineering (FSE) have been appointed as inaugural Fellows of the Academy for the Mathematical Sciences, a new national body established to bring together the UK’s strongest mathematicians to help solve some of the UK’s biggest challenges. The appointments place Manchester researchers among a cohort of around 100 Fellows drawn from academia, business, industry and government. The Academy’s Fellowship will work collectively to address major national challenges including pandemic preparedness, economic transformation, national security, climate change and the safe…

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Mary-Ann Etiebet: Confronting Preventable Disease

Howie and Harlan are joined by Mary-Ann Etiebet of the public health organization Vital Strategies to discuss how policy, prevention, and stronger public-health systems can reduce the global burden of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and other preventable conditions. Harlan reports on the federal push toward fully autonomous clinical care for heart failure; Howie looks at proposed cuts to Medicare Advantage payments and what they mean for beneficiaries, plans, and taxpayers. Show…

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Programme of the Third Russia-India Conference

This is the Club’s third annual Russian-Indian conference. Since its inception, it has become a platform for in-depth intellectual exchange, allowing experts to discuss the development of bilateral relations between Russia and India, as well as the broader geopolitical situation.   Programme of the Russia-India Conference of the Valdai Discussion Club and the Vivekananda International Foundation “India–Russia in a Changing Global Order: Strategic Autonomy, Security, and Partnership in the 21st…

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NLRB Clarifies New Charge Intake Procedures Aimed at Reducing Backlog

Quick Hits The NLRB has implemented new case intake procedures requiring charging parties to submit evidence before their unfair labor practice cases are docketed. Under the new procedure, a failure to provide documentation and information supporting a charge within two weeks may lead to the dismissal of the charge. Designed to enhance efficiency in case handling and reduce the existing case backlog, the updated process may result in quicker resolutions…

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Without War and Peace: The Post-Conflict Development of the South Caucasus

Watching the developments in the South Caucasus, we see a picture that seems paradoxical by all previous standards of our understanding of the nature of international relations: rather than overcoming political barriers, numerous economic partnerships have adapted to them, entrenching existing fault lines. Since powerful external forces are involved in these partnerships, the regional conflict is projected onto the global level, becoming an element of a larger geopolitical competition. In…

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Who is accountable for high-value audience growth?

Where does accountability sit for attracting and retaining high-value audiences? Editorial, Marketing, Product, or … somewhere else? Reading time: 2 minutes As search declines, high-value audiences are no longer “acquired”, they are built. This report explores how fragmented accountability across editorial, product and commercial teams slows progress, and why clear leadership, shared priorities and common metrics are now critical to driving habitual, high-value audience growth. Download the full report here.…

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