Law Reviews, Journals, Newsletters
Law Reviews, Journals, Newsletters
A publication by AboutLaw.com researchers and interns. Submission from law students, lawyers, and legal scholars are invited.
ALRaR is a research publication investigating the outcomes of systems of legal theories and legal institutions. Our researchers focus not as much on the cases that are resolved at the trial stage, but on the cases that are dismissed or plead. In the US, only 2% of the people accused and charged of a crime will have their day in court. This data reveals this modern justice system not only as the adversarial exercise we learned in law schools, but also as the transactional market legal practitioner eventual come know.
Subscribe to Aboutlaw Newsletter
The Alabama Law Review, now approaching its sixty-first volume, is building on a rich tradition of scholarship aimed at exploring issues of national as well as local significance to scholars, legislators, jurists, and practitioners.
The Alaska Law Review is a scholarly publication that examines legal issues affecting the state of Alaska. It is composed of second and third year law students from Duke University School of Law, and governed by a faculty advisor committee.
ALB is the only independent magazine dedicated to the latest legal news, events and developments in Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, China, Asia and the international business community. With a circulation throughout Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, China, along with parts of Japan, Taiwan and Korea, ALB is the region’s most effective way to reach all the major lawyers, corporate counsel and business leaders. With coverage on all the important and emerging areas of practice and business, ALB provides the most updated legal and business news from in and around the region.
Online New York LLC
Legal Forms, Legal Forms - Online 0
Online New York LLC
What is a limited liability company?
A limited liability company, commonly called an “LLC,” is a business structure that is similar to a corporation, but less formal. Business owners form LLCs to protect themselves from being personally liable for business debts.
LLCs combine the pass-through taxation of a partnership or sole proprietorship with the limited liability of a corporation. As in a partnership or sole proprietorship, income “passes through” the LLC to the LLC owners, and the owners report the business’s income on their personal income tax returns. Unlike a corporation, the LLC itself is not a separate taxable entity.
Like owners of a corporation, however, all LLC owners are protected from personal liability for business debts and claims—a feature known as “limited liability.” This means that if the business owes money or faces a lawsuit for some other reason, only the assets of the business itself are at risk. Creditors usually can’t reach the personal assets of the LLC owners, such as a house or car. (However, both LLC owners and corporate shareholders can lose this protection by acting illegally, unethically, or irresponsibly.)
For these reasons, many people say the LLC combines the best of partnerships and corporations.
The decision to form an LLC is an important one. Like a corporation, an LLC is meant to be a permanent legal entity, and it will exist—and incur taxes and fees, whether or not you are actively operating a business—until you take legal steps to dissolve it.
Online California Corporation
Legal Forms, Legal Forms - Online 0
Save money and time with the Online California Corporation formation application. Our easy-to-use service helps you form your LLC directly online without the costly attorney fees. Pick a package, complete a comprehensive interview online, follow our step-by-step instructions, and leave the rest to us. We file your articles of incorporation with the California Secretary of State for you and your corporation will come into existence the day they’re filed.
How do I form a corporation in California?
In California, you create a corporation by filing “articles of incorporation” with the Secretary of State’s office and paying a filing fee. You’ll also need corporate bylaws and resolutions signed by the board of directors, though these documents don’t need to be filed with the Secretary of State. Your bylaws explicitly state the rights and responsibilities of the shareholders and directors and govern how your corporation will be run.
After your articles of incorporation have been filed and you sign corporate bylaws, your corporation is official, but you will still need to obtain the licenses and permits that all new businesses must have to operate. These may include a business license (sometimes also referred to as a “tax registration certificate”), a federal employer identification number, a sellers’ permit, or a zoning permit. Forming a corporation does not exempt you from any of these requirements that apply to all businesses.
Immigration Bundle
This Immigration Bundle packs almost everything you’d want to know about U.S.immigration laws and procedures into three compact volumes. Whether you are an immigrant yourself or assisting others to obtain U.S. visas, green cards, or other immigration benefits, you’ll find plain-English explanations of:
who is eligible for what types of visas, green cards, or U.S. citizenship
what forms and documents are needed to apply
who will have difficulty getting approved, due to crimes, immigration violations, low income, and so on
what special exceptions or waivers can help applicants gain approval
how to avoid or deal with delays and bureaucratic mixups.
. . . and much more. This immigration books have helped thousands of people obtain the right to live and work in the United States.